Davies, George

Birth Name Davies, George 1 2 3 4a
Gender male
Age at Death less than about 74 years

Events

Event Date Place Notes Sources
Birth about 1874 Crewe
 
Residence 1881 Hough
 
Occupation 1881  
 
Criminal Conviction 1890-03-17 Chester
Event Reference Note

Tried with elder brother, Richard Davies (18) for the murder of their father, Richard Davies Snr aged 50, tailor, on Sat 25 Jan 1890. Both convicted. Richard was hung by James Berry at Knutsford, Cheshire. George was reprieved on account of his age, jailed.

5a
Residence 1891 Gillingham
 
Residence 1901 Parkhurst
 
Occupation 1901  
 
Release 1905-03-31 Parkhurst
 
Residence 1911 Northwich
 
Occupation 1911  
 
Residence 1914 Chorlton-on-Medlock
 
Occupation 1914  
 
Death before 1948  
 

Families

Married Wife Edwards, Sarah Elizabeth
   
Event Date Place Notes Sources
Marriage 1914-05-25 Chorlton-on-Medlock
6a 7a

Narrative

Richard Davies b. 1840 Crewe Green, Crewe, Cheshire. - 25 January 1890 Hough, nr. Shavington, Cheshire.

On Saturday 25th January, George Davies who was only sixteen, rushed into the family home and claimed that their father had been attacked by two men on a Crewe road. He took police to the scene where they found the body of Richard Davies senior aged fifty, a tailor. He had been battered about the head with a large tree branch that lay close by, covered in blood. Detectives from Cheshire Constabulary questioned the family and learned that the father frequently bullied his children. A search for two assailants had yielded no clues so they set about re-checking the statements made by his two sons. Richard Davies junior trapped himself when he revealed more about the murder than he should have and soon he and George were charged. They were tried before Mr Justice Wills at Chester on 20 March (1890) and after a fair trial, both were convicted. George was reprieved a few days before the scheduled execution on account of his age, although he was guilty, if not more so, than his brother. Richard Davies was hanged by James Berry, who later wrote that the spectre of the young man frequently came back to haunt him. The execution took place in Knutsford (Cheshire) on the 8th April 1890. Richard Davies was only 18 when he died.

Source:
http://trees.ancestry.co.uk/tree/10555018/person/162718342/story/2?pg=32817&pgpl=pid

Narrative

Richard Davies.

Another case in which " the one was taken and the other left " was the Crewe murder case, in which Richard and George Davies were found guilty of the murder of their father, with a strong recommendation to mercy on account of their youth. So far as could be made out, there was absolutely no difference in the degrees of their guilt ; but the sentence of George was commuted to
penal servitude simply because he was the younger. At this there was great excitement throughout the country, and thousands of telegrams and petitions were poured into the Home Office, begging that the leniency might be equally extended to both since the guilt of both was equal. But all to no purpose. The condemned lad protested, to his last moments, that although he took part in the murder, he never struck his father nor handled the hatchet with which the deed was done. He
wrote most affectionate letters to his mother, brothers and sisters ; who seemed to fully believe the truth of his statements with regard to his share in the crime. Ten minutes before his death he wrote out the same declaration and handed it to the chaplain. He stated that he had no wish to live, but that he hoped and expected to meet his relations in heaven. When I entered his cell he was pale, but calm. After pinioning him his face seemed still paler and his mouth worked convulsively as he strove to keep back his emotion. Along the corridor he walked firmly, with bent head, but when we reached the yard where a fresh breeze was blowing and the blue sky was visible, he raised his head and eyes for a last look at the world and the sky. He died firmly, with a brief prayer on his lips.

My experiences as an executioner by James Berry, London : P. Lund, [1892]
http://www.archive.org/details/MyExperiencesAsAnExecutioner

Family Map

Family Map

Pedigree

    1. Davies, George
      1. Edwards, Sarah Elizabeth

Source References

  1. George Davies 1881 Census
  2. George Davies 1891 Census
  3. George Davies 1901 Census
  4. George Davies 1911 Census
      • Transcript:

        DAVIES, George Head Single M 37 1874 Insurance Agent Crewe County of Chester

        RG number: RG14
        Piece: 21675
        Reference: RG14PN21675 RG78PN1291 RD447 SD2 ED9 SN38

        Registration District: Northwich
        Sub District: Northwich
        Enumeration District: 9
        Parish: Northwich

        Address: 75 Victoria Road Northwich
        County: Cheshire

  5. England & Wales, Criminal Registers
      • Transcript:

        17 Mar 1890, Chester

        George Davies & Richard Davies, offence of murder, both sentenced to death.

  6. England & Wales, FreeBMD Marriage Index
      • Transcript:

        Name: Sarah E Rowlands
        Year of Registration: 1914
        Quarter of Registration: Apr-May-Jun
        Spouse's Surname: Davies
        District: Chorlton
        County: Lancashire
        Volume: 8c
        Page: 1994 (click to see others on page)

  7. Sarah Elizabeth Rowlands & George Davies Marriage Certificate
      • Transcript:

        25 May 1914

        George Davies, 40, Bachelor, Assistant Superintendant Insurance Company, 42 St. Leonard Street, Chorlton on Medlock.
        Father: Richard Davies (deceased), Tailor.

        Sarah Elizabeth Rowlands, 23, Spinster, No occupation, 5 Wellington Street East, Higher Broughton.
        Father: David Rowlands, Gardener

        Witnesses: G. E. Hodgkinson, Emily Hodgkinson