Transcription
Murder and Robbery. An Account of a most Horrid Murder, supposed to be commited on the body of Mr MARK Dow, a respectab Shoe- maker in Leith Street, Edinburgh, on Wednesday Evening the 10th or early , on Thursday morning, the 11th Jan- uary,1827, who was found dead near- ly naked, at the bottom of a stair, north west corner of Bank Street, with & large wound on h s head. Edin. 12th January, 1827. The following account of this horrible transac- tion is copied from the " Edinhurgh Observer," Newspaper of this day, which is the only authentic notification yet published of this melancholy affair. " A VERY extraordinary sensation ware ated throughout this city, caused by the report of a most respectable tradesman, Mr Mark Dow, Shoemaker, Leith Street, having been found mur- dered, about one o'clock that morning. The facts of this catastrophe, as far as can yet be learned, are shortly these :?On Wednesday Mr Dow was pre sent at a dinner in Mrs Ferguson's Tavern, Lawn- market, of the incorporation of Shoemakers, of which incorporation he was Treasurer. He left the Tavern about eleven o'clock, with upwards of £40 in cash, besides a bill for a considerable amount, in his possession, apparently sober; and by a quarter past one o'clock of the following morning he was found, without coat, vest, hat, and shoes, lying dead at the bottom of a stair at the north west corner of Bank-Strret, with a large wound on his head, from which a considerable quantity of blood had flowed, but there was no contusion. Near the stair, but round the corner, is a house from the door of which there is a sort of subterraneous communication with the stair where Mr Dow was found. The landlord of this house, it is said was out on some bussiness, and was returning home, and not getting admission by the usual entrance, intending to get to round by this passage, went down stairs, and stumbled over the body of Mr Dow. He imme- diately gave information to a watchman, and the corpse was conveyed to the Police Office. An active shrewd officer of that establishment, named Smail, being out, and hearing a man state that a murder had been commited, and that the informent had seen the hat of the unhappy sufferer burnt, contrived to get the narrator of the tale in- duced to go to the Police Office, from whence he and a party was dispatched to the before-mentioned house, where they found a quantity of ashes, which they presumed were the remains of the hat and vest; and, upon examination, the coat and shoes, a small sum of money, and the bill were found. Four or five different individuals are now in cus- tody,and the Sheriff has instated an inquiry into the. circumstances. Mr Dow was, we understand, a widower, and has left a family of five children." Printed for Wm. Henry------Price One Penny;
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Date published:
1827 shelfmark: F.3.a.14(35)
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