Fred Jeffs

Born in 1919 in Stirlingshire, Scotland, Frederick Walter Jeffs moved to Birmingham, England as a child. He trained as an electrician at the Austin Longbridge car factory, a hub of wartime production, before enlisting in the Royal Army Service Corps during World War II. Captured as a prisoner of war, Jeffs endured the hardships of … More Fred Jeffs

Elizabeth Thomas

In the quiet coastal village of Laugharne, Carmarthenshire, Wales—a place immortalized by poet Dylan Thomas for its serene estuary views and timeless charm—a single scream shattered the winter twilight on January 10th, 1953. Seventy-eight-year-old Elizabeth Thomas, a beloved local figure known for her cheerful demeanor and tireless work as a church cleaner, was brutally attacked … More Elizabeth Thomas

Andrew Paterson Drury

Twenty-eight-year-old Andrew Paterson Drury lived at 21a Carnegie Street in Dundee, Scotland, and worked as a machinist. Dundee, with its jute mills and bustling docks, was a hub for seafarers from across the Commonwealth, and on Saturday, November 25th, 1950, Andrew found himself in the heart of this transient world. According to trial testimonies, he … More Andrew Paterson Drury

Jonathan Lewis

In the quiet market town of Arundel, West Sussex, England, where the River Arun winds lazily through medieval streets and ancient castles, a shocking discovery shattered the summer calm on August 8th, 1980. The body of twenty-nine-year-old Jonathan Lewis, a charismatic antiques dealer from nearby Brighton, was pulled from the murky waters of the river. … More Jonathan Lewis

Lillian Wright

Fifty-five-year-old Lillian Wright lived in Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. Born in 1925, she had spent much of her adulthood in the town, a hub for the region’s fishing industry that was then grappling with economic shifts amid North Sea oil booms and declining trawler fleets. In 1980, Lillian was retired or semi-retired, her days filled with … More Lillian Wright

Arif Roberts

Gladesmore Community School, located on Prospect Place in Tottenham, North London, England, was a microcosm of the area’s diverse yet tense demographic landscape in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The school served a predominantly working-class neighborhood, home to large Caribbean, African, and growing Southeast Asian communities, including many Vietnamese families who had resettled in … More Arif Roberts

James White

On June 30th, 1926, forty-three-year-old James White died in Acorn Wood, on the outskirts of Nottingham, England. Early press digests and later crime compendia preserve a brief but striking outline: White was found at the foot of a tree as if he had run into it—yet the medical opinion was that the collision wasn’t what … More James White