The evil Mrs Elizabeth Brownrigg
36:03
The toxic London Smog of 1952
15:20
He sees you when your sleeping...
6:22
Savage of the Yard!
1:03:17
10 ай бұрын
Robert maudsley The caged man.
16:53
The Red Barn of Polstead
27:20
11 ай бұрын
Kate Webster, the Richmond case.
23:50
Evelyn Foster & the mystery man?
1:02:18
Neville Heath's hidden persona.
48:27
Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen
49:16
Жыл бұрын
The Gnomes of Wollaton mystery
12:28
The Charles Walton mystery
13:53
Жыл бұрын
Gordon Frederick Cummins
30:19
Жыл бұрын
John Reginald Halliday Christie
1:01:09
Anthony Arkwright's 56 hours
20:09
2 жыл бұрын
Helen Duncan, Medium
16:32
2 жыл бұрын
Steven Wright
16:51
2 жыл бұрын
The mysterious case of Julia Wallace
1:05:50
The Pierrepoints, Britain's Hangmen
25:04
Christopher Halliwell
19:10
2 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@magesalmanac6424
@magesalmanac6424 11 күн бұрын
Yess time to snuggle in for another fascinating story, thank you Juniverse
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 10 күн бұрын
Your welcome. Thanks for watching
@alanvt1
@alanvt1 12 күн бұрын
Well! I have it on good authority, that all thats felt is a tingling sensation behind the neck
@alanvt1
@alanvt1 12 күн бұрын
Harsh but fair!
@jamescrydeman540
@jamescrydeman540 13 күн бұрын
I have read three books, all about these three gentlemen and I wonder if everybody read them if the debate about capital punishment for capital crimes would be different. Knowing in detail how the system worked and other details not commonly known to the public i think would adjust many opinions, not necessarily change them but be better informed. To know in greater detail how and why you might hold that opinion.
@donnaadams5217
@donnaadams5217 14 күн бұрын
OHHH great just got my jams on in bed gonna watch a fall asleep to this and do the same again each night till I get the full story. Thanks ❤ from SCOTLAND
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 14 күн бұрын
Very good. I really enjoy the vintage cop stories Thank you❤
@1339LARS
@1339LARS 16 күн бұрын
Top notch, thank you!!!! //Lars
@jamesblackshaw132
@jamesblackshaw132 16 күн бұрын
Nothing to do with Noddy
@Nick-hy4sk
@Nick-hy4sk 16 күн бұрын
What about Tim Evans..how.did he feel when he found out he had murdered an innocent man
@Diamondmine212
@Diamondmine212 28 күн бұрын
Albert when he retired was a pub landlord in Lancashire. He was always said to be a cheerful, friendly man and was well like by all his customers and friends .During the war the American army was executing so many prisoners at one stage( servicemen ) that they requested help from our home office so they sent Albert, when he arrived at their prison he saw the the executed prisoners had just been put on the floor of the next room , he was furious and ordered the guards to find the men coffins , he told them they’d paid for their crime , they were due to have their bodies treated with respect whether they liked it or not. He retired immediately when he arrived at a prison and on seeing the prisoner saw it was a relative .
@geoffreylee5199
@geoffreylee5199 Ай бұрын
The last hanging in Canada was in 1962, when two guys from Detroit came to Toronto to enforce their boss’ order. They were immediately caught, and visited the Toronto Don Gaol and the deed was done back to back. Canada eliminated the DS in 1976.
@djsimonrossprice9400
@djsimonrossprice9400 Ай бұрын
I thought I'd knew a fair bit about Christie and the murders but your detail is superb.. Great hours listening.. What's really frightening is to think Christie was in north London And John George Haigh was in South London AT THE SAME TIME plying their wears... Great hour. Kudos..❤
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 15 күн бұрын
Thank you
@fossy4321
@fossy4321 Ай бұрын
Why does the video keep showing an American style noose which I don't think was used in the UK., certainly not by any of the hangmen in the video. they all used a hemp rope with a woven in steel loop, and a covering of soft calf leather for the section around the victims neck.
@trevorgill1678
@trevorgill1678 Ай бұрын
Albert never had children so no grandson.
@matthewspicer1068
@matthewspicer1068 Ай бұрын
Also on this day .... 27 July 1955 .... Albert Pierrepoint's Last and 433rd Execution .... Norman Green (25) murder [sexual two little boys] in Wigan .... Executed at Liverpool's Walton Gaol - assistant Robert Stewart .... Matthew:)
@putridpeasant
@putridpeasant Ай бұрын
I think your podcasts are brilliant and love listening to you and appreciate your work. ❤from gavin in Dublin 🇮🇪💚
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 15 күн бұрын
Thank you so much.
@NudePostingConspiracyTheories
@NudePostingConspiracyTheories Ай бұрын
We have to remember too, that , when he had ‘psychological evaluations’ which found ‘no abnormalities’ means, well… “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest’ was made in the 1970’s , and the so-called psychological profession was usless at best snd eicjed at worst, many years afyer Peter Manuel was ‘diagnosed’ in the 1940’s and found to have no abnormality
@NudePostingConspiracyTheories
@NudePostingConspiracyTheories Ай бұрын
He wont in truth be Scotland’s first serial killer. Throughout history there will always have been serial killers, only we could not track people back then. This kind of evil possession will have gone back to neolithic times, no doubt. Good report, thanl you
@user-xh3lz9xt4l
@user-xh3lz9xt4l Ай бұрын
The Execution room at Durham is still in the prison which just happens to be the visitors cafeteria.
@user-xh3lz9xt4l
@user-xh3lz9xt4l Ай бұрын
Is the Pierrepoint School in Farnham in Surrey related to the Pierrepoint family.
@RobertMcQuillan-my3du
@RobertMcQuillan-my3du Ай бұрын
Great stuff 🎉
@howardgoddard7803
@howardgoddard7803 Ай бұрын
I live in Hadfield padfield and glossop over 35 years and I never knew that and work in or around the Glossop area as the Goddard and James family where well know as farmers or engineers tree forestry workers or even weavers and I never new that that true story old Glossop. And Padfield and Hadfield were built on and places around Whitefield and Glossop Where a lot of folk laws and short story were true yours Howard Goddard Arboriculturist and Forestry officer for G.M.C parks & recreational services,and work with the old High Peak Gardening department based in Howard Park for the council department of Glossop borough Council services covering all the outer areas of the peak High and Buxton areas also.
@RVEEATOR
@RVEEATOR Ай бұрын
Albert ended up, or at least spent time in, Mundesley Hospital in Norfolk (not far from Cromer). This is presently a privately funded psychiatric hospital.
@marilynhudson5805
@marilynhudson5805 Ай бұрын
I love your videos and the work that you put into them. I'm glad I subscribed. You are very relaxing.. I really appreciate the sound of the BELL 💯💖
@charlesachurch7265
@charlesachurch7265 Ай бұрын
A great presentation xxx thanks.
@charlesachurch7265
@charlesachurch7265 Ай бұрын
A divorce would have been a better result.
@jolandasteffen3578
@jolandasteffen3578 Ай бұрын
Thanx for posting Juniverse❤doing dishes & listening ❤
@jaymesguy239
@jaymesguy239 Ай бұрын
I personally don't understand the controversy. Of course he killed his wife. The phone booth information should have been enough to damn him. The phone company kept a record of calls to that faulty phone booth and they could determine when the call was made from that booth. Who else but him would have been in the vicinity of his own house to make that phone call? Had it been anyone else, they would have been exposing themselves totally unnecessarily. The alibi Wallace ultimately went with was NOT that the other person was trying to set him up to take the blame, merely to send him on a wild-goose chase so that THEY could do it. So then, why wait until the following day to commit the murder? Wouldn't it have made more sense for them to have waited until Wallace was actually AT the cafe and THEN commit the crime? Any other scenario simply doesn't make sense. Wallace was counting on the fact that no one would find out he had made the call and from that location. But, effectively, they did. And he still got off, like so many others. At the same time, many REALLY innocent people were railroaded by the justice system and declared guilty of crimes they did not commit. That's why it's so hard to provide justice. People are easily swayed by counter-factualism and image. People figured a middle class citizen wouldn't do something like that, just like with the defense of Lizzie Borden. Of course, that's stupid bias.
@bessofhardwick9311
@bessofhardwick9311 2 ай бұрын
What a mystery!
@bessofhardwick9311
@bessofhardwick9311 2 ай бұрын
Poor Timothy Evans should be added to the list of Christie's victims. Thanks again for a very well-told story. The way you cover the cases gives a much clearer overview than other true-crime channels.
@bessofhardwick9311
@bessofhardwick9311 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this video. So sad for those poor women and girls.
@booshting3520
@booshting3520 2 ай бұрын
Ay up, tha naaas
@kleinbogen
@kleinbogen 2 ай бұрын
This is a lot more than just the first postage stamp. Very informative!!!
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 2 ай бұрын
I appreciate that thank you
@garymcguire8529
@garymcguire8529 2 ай бұрын
The whole thing reminds me of the Gateshead UFO incident off 1944, where kids were chased by small aliens. There is also some missing time in this story, which is typical of UFO abductions, and false memories are implanted. This would explain the Gnome appearance, by taking an image from the children's brain and replacing their image.
@becky2235
@becky2235 2 ай бұрын
How people could kill others ill never know unless its self defence or war ill never know
@gazed1435
@gazed1435 2 ай бұрын
Albert's mum Mary Buxton was my Grandmothers sister
@cliffjacobs3952
@cliffjacobs3952 2 ай бұрын
Surely giving birth to 16_children is beyond fertile: that's fecund.
@stevegregory2867
@stevegregory2867 2 ай бұрын
My father had told me that his uncle was assistant to Mr Albert Pierrepont. I myself was in an angling club that had a member who had the same surname of Albert.Often wondered to myself if there was a connection.
@matthewspicer1068
@matthewspicer1068 2 ай бұрын
What was your dad's uncle's surname .... Matthew:)
@Dessan01
@Dessan01 24 күн бұрын
@@matthewspicer1068 If this is true, there are only a few of people it could have been - Syd Dernley (who was frankly should never have been allowed the post, as it's fairly clear now he got some kind of sexual satisfaction from his work - he was eventually removed from the list after his conviction for publishing "obscene material"). Harry Allen or Harry Kirk.
@KeithPrince-cp3me
@KeithPrince-cp3me 3 ай бұрын
A very peculiar case, if you were making something up, even as kids, you'd invent something more plausible, like the cars they said had no steering wheels. As for estimating speed that's often difficult even for adults so we can be sure it's grossly exaggerated. We also expect discrepancies between eye witnesses, indeed if statements are too consistent that's usually a mark against them. Others have reported odd sightings around the park, also there were a couple of areas known as the swamp in the park grounds and it's not clear which the story relates to? There is still a Fairy Census of contemporary accounts published most recently 2018. I once spoke to a young women who claimed some years earlier to have seen a "gnome" walking by the roadside as she passed as a passenger in a car. She tried to get the driver, her mother to go back to get another look but her mother refused saying she was being silly. Some years later, the young woman said, her mother revealed she too had actually seen this gnome.
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 3 ай бұрын
That's really interesting. Thank you. Actually I don't think the swamp area was mentioned in any account that I could find, I have been to the park on many occasions, as a child it was much more accessible than it is now so who knows what's lurking in amongst the darkness of the woods and shrubbery .. I would love to see a gnome myself but somehow I think my scepticism would blind me to it.
@chicagogyrl4846
@chicagogyrl4846 4 ай бұрын
It would have been nice to know what that certain age was, when they went to work.
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 4 ай бұрын
usually teenage but it wasn't unusual for the children to be younger in some areas.
@throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361
@throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361 4 ай бұрын
The anecdote about William Joyce complaining about his nose itching is pure fiction. Never happened. James Corbett wasn't a "regular" at his pub, he was an occasional drinker there. Singing was common in pubs at that time. They did indeed call each other Tish and Tosh, but Pierrepoint never knew his real name until the day he executed him.
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 4 ай бұрын
In Albert’s own words He was one of my regulars ( came in every Saturday night), although He didn’t know his real name until the execution, he always greeted me (Albert) with “Hallo Tosh” and I used to answer “Hallo Tish” . It was a catchphrase of the time. He was everybody’s friend, he was lively and easy going. Almost as soon as he got his beer he would start to sing. He often brought a woman with him on a Saturday night. On the night the murder was committed he and the woman left the pub and he called out to Albert goodnight Tosh and Albert responded with goodnight Tish. Although the Nose itch maybe a rumour where John Christie is concerned, whoever started it added a nice touch IMO.
@jameshogan6142
@jameshogan6142 20 күн бұрын
@@juniverse6686 Albert should have replied my trigger finger (or lever pushing hand even) is itchier.
@gizkokoro8834
@gizkokoro8834 4 ай бұрын
Did you know in What date george both??
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 4 ай бұрын
Hi I'm not sure but I think you may be asking re-George's death? As far as I know after his ordeal he left and returned to his family and I believe, if you go by the Authentic anecdotes of George Lukins, he remained well and had little to no more fits. As for his death that is not known .. at least I don't know.
@gizkokoro8834
@gizkokoro8834 4 ай бұрын
@@juniverse6686 thanks and in the book What he said about her family etc
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 4 ай бұрын
George his family and friends thanked the Reverend for believing his story and the fears of his friend who had asked for the churches help. As before the church took him in nobody believed him to be possessed.
@annstubbs2256
@annstubbs2256 4 ай бұрын
Humanity at its finest
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 4 ай бұрын
I don't understand the cruel and hatefulness of these people.
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 4 ай бұрын
Fabulous video!! So glad to hear and see your vid.
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 4 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@kuntface5
@kuntface5 4 ай бұрын
Just found your channel. I really enjoy the content. You're doing great. Your voice is great for long play videos. Easy to fall asleep too. Thank you
@juniverse6686
@juniverse6686 4 ай бұрын
Glad you like them! thank you for watching/listening
@IanKerry-ip6fx
@IanKerry-ip6fx 5 ай бұрын
Rot in hell monster
@kenmorgan2507
@kenmorgan2507 5 ай бұрын
The Pierrepoints were psychopaths, Albert wanted to be a hangman from early age, thats not normal, his father used to volunteer to travel the country to hang people,as for Albert his job being confidential used to tell people in his pub stories of his hangings, Diana Dors met him once saying he was a horrible little man.