Monday, 26 May 2014

Dubbed crime of the century

Edwardian society was to witness what was dubbed the crime of the Century

Music Hall Actress Belle Elmore
London wasn't short of murders or horror stories so what made this murder in particular the crime of the century?  The vibrant American music hall performer Cora Crippen disappeared in 1910 and Dr Crippen her American husband was tried and found guilty of murder before being executed at Pentonville prison the same year. 

Why was the title of crime of the century so eagerly embraced? Did people not believe a more grisly crime could ever take place? Or was it perhaps that this crime in particular ticked all the boxes; something for everyone?

I believe a concoction of four key elements raised interest in the Dr Crippen Cellar murder case to levels not previously experienced in Edwardian society. Read more...



Cora Crippen

Edwardian Glamour

When in the States, Cora had the ambition to be an opera singer. However, after they came to London, she had realigned her sights on becoming a Music Hall performer, a less reputable profession. She used the stage name ‘Belle Elmore’. Her stage career never really took off and (she is) sadly now infamously immortalised as the wife and victim of Dr Crippen.

Popular song of the day:
“Dr. Crippen killed Belle Elmore
Ran away with Miss le Neve
Right across the ocean blue
Followed by Inspector Dew
Ship's ahoy, naughty boy!”

The Music Hall was a staple of English entertainment during the Edwardian era. Cora socialised with a number of famous variety players of the time, including Lil Hawthorne of "The Hawthorne Sisters" and Lil's husband/manager John Nash.

Belle Elmore did not find the success she had hoped for in the Music Hall. In the last couple of years she had focussed her attention on the Music Hall Ladies' Guild as its Honorary Treasurer. This provided her with a seemingly impressive title and enabled her to increase her presence at social events. Being seen to be important is one skill many celebrities live off.

Crippen home, 39 Hilldrop Crescent, Camden
The case of Dr Crippen also included cross-Atlantic travel as the fugitives Crippen and Le Neve had boarded the SS Montrose in Antwerp, bound for Montreal, Canada. The Edwardian era was an Age of Steam and Electricity. The result of which was an increase in wealth and a group of people; the nouveau riche‘.  Travelling for leisure became a class-wide pastime. 

One could rub elbows with royalty and aristocratic luminaries and thumb your nose at those who snubbed you back at home. Others found that it strengthened the bond between upper class societies, mirroring the familial ties between the royal families of Britain and Europe. The meeting of and socializing with others of a like mind and background solidified the significance of the well-born and well-placed.


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