THE MURDER OF FANNY ADAMS
By Barbara Thomas
On scrolling through Hampshire Constabulary History I came
across this article:
Although many think that the murder of children is a modern curse unfortunately, this has been happening for centuries.
There was this infamous case concerning the murder at
The murder took place at Flood Meadow on Saturday 24th
August1867.
The child was not only murdered but decapitated then brutally
Mutilated, her body parts spread over a wide area.
Even by Victorian standards this was a horrific murder.
The murderer, a Mr Frederick Baker aged 29, had been arrested
Within hours of the discovery of the child’s body.
He was discovered with blood-stained clothing. Also, damming evidence
was found in an entry in his
diary “Killed a young girl”
Involved in the arrest were Superintendent Cheyney and PC George
Watkins.
Baker was tried at Winchester Assizes in December of that year.
The defence introduced evidence of a history of violent mental illnesses
in Baker’s family, but he was still found guilty.
It took the jury only 15mins to reach an unanimously verdict.
Baker was publicly hanged on Christmas Eve the very same month,
outside the County prison at
This was swift justice indeed.
Also this was to be the last public hanging at
A detailed book entitles, SWEET FA THE TRUE STORY OF FANNY ADAMS,
written and published by Peter Cansfield.
Many of the buildings still exist except for the Police Sation.
LAW, CRIME AND HISTORY (2013)
Scrolling through I came across an article connecting “Sweet” Fanny
Adams and Sarah’s Law.
This article contains two cases of female murder, modern and
historical. Where both victims have become household names.
There was ‘written iin the print “PRESS”’ an intent to explore how
similar cases resulted in the divergent use of victim’s names and how the names
of both victims become emblematic and exploited by the press.
Sarah Payne was abducted and murdered by a man with previous
convictions for abducting and indecently assaulting another young girl.
Sarah’s mother fought and won and took it to the Houses of Parliament
and it became known as “Sarah’s Law” which became a child sex offender
disclosure scheme, which enabled members if the public to ask the police
whether an individual (e.g a neighbour or family friend) was a convicted sex
offender.
Although it is a fact that the names of the murderer’s were often more
remembered than the names of their victims, this was not the case with Fanny
Adams or Sarah Payne, but how each one is remembered differs remarkably.
The term “FANNY ADAMS” has passed into a pejorative slang term whereas
SARAH PAYNE has come to be positively associated with greater public sympathy.
First glance suggests very different responses to these “remembered”
victims.
The popular use, if Fanny’s name implies this Victorian child victim of
such a savage murder was treated as inconsequential, or at worst taken as a
figure of humour.
That her name could be used as a euphemism for “Nothing at all” is
remarkable and is more striking set against the Sarah Payne case.
In 1869 new rations of tinned beef mutton was introduced for British
Seaman. The sailors were unimpressed by it and suggested it might be the butchered
remains of “FANNY ADAMS”
The name became slang for mediocre mutton; stew scarce leftovers and
therefore worthless.
Copyright Barbara Thomas - 26.05.25
Cockney Rhyming slang "sweet FA" most will know what the 'FA' stands for, if you don't (answers on a post card) Clue ~ 'A' stands for All...
ReplyDeleteSurprised at your comments Fanny ADAMS was an 8 year old
ReplyDeleteWho had been murdered in the worse possible way
ReplyDelete