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THE ARGUS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1892

 

 

MAD FRED PART 1

 

 

—♦—

 

FREDERICK DEEMING: THE MAN OF MANY FACES

 


 

TALES FROM THE KAISER WILHELM

 


 

MR. DREWN PLANS THE CRIME OF THE CENTURY

 

When Frederick Bailey Deeming was hanged a little under four months ago, the world sighed with relief in the knowledge that the 38-year-old English-born murderer could kill no more. But with the recent murders of two prostitutes in Melbourne’s north-east, and the various ghostly sightings in a house in Windsor, one has to wonder – is Mad Fred really gone, or is his spirit back for more blood?

Some claim the two Melbourne murders are that of a Jack the Ripper copycat. After all, the first body was found on the morning of August 31st, and the second on the 8th of this month – the exact dates of two of the Ripper murders. But if they are the work of a cruel and bloodthirsty copycat, why start with Jack’s third victim? Why in the city of Melbourne? And why four years after those in London’s East End?

What of the sinister sightings at the small brick house on Andrew Street? Neighbours claim they have heard strange noises and seen things that cannot be explained and yet the house has remained unoccupied since Deeming left the property Christmas Day of last year, the day after he killed his wife, Emily, and buried her body under the hearthstone in one of the bedrooms.

In this special three part report for
The Argus
, we’ll take a look at the heinous crime for which Mad Fred was hanged. By speaking with those close to the events you’ll gain unprecedented access to both the man himself, and details concerning the ghastly crime; details never before revealed, including startling revelations from a prison inmate of Deeming claiming to be Jack the Ripper. We’ll also take a look at the reported ghostly sightings, speak to those who say Mad Fred’s ghost still haunts the Andrew Street house, and we’ll visit the locations of the two prostitute murders. Then you can decide for yourself whether a madman is on the prowl, or if a ghost is indeed haunting Melbourne; the ghost of the man responsible for what has come to be known as the crime of the century.

Frederick Deeming was a man of many faces. The Cheshire-born fraudster and multiple murderer could be both charming and ruthless. One of the passengers onboard the
Kaiser Wilhelm II
, the ship that brought Deeming and his second wife to Melbourne on the 15th of December, saw this contradiction first-hand. “I detested the man I knew as Albert Williams,” 24-year-old Brisbane seamstress Kate Jensen said. “To others aboard the ship, he could be rude, bombastic. He would often boast about his travels abroad, claiming he had been to more places than most men would ever see. He said he had fought the Zulus in Africa – would even brandish a knife and tell people he had killed many Zulus with it. Then, without a second thought, he would turn into a paranoid creature and accuse passengers of stealing from him, including his wife's valuable jewellery. We all thought he was mad. But, he was always loving and caring towards Emily. She would often talk to me of his affections towards her, and their excitement at arriving in Melbourne and starting a new life together. It seemed there were two people living inside the one body.”

But Deeming’s strange behaviour didn’t stop at his fanciful tales of being abroad or accusations of theft.

“My cabin on the ship was opposite the Williams’ so I saw and heard many things,” Kate continued. “I heard Albert carrying on conversations with his canary. Quite extraordinary conversations that had to be heard to be believed.”

Fred Deeming brought with him to Melbourne a canary, which he seemed to treat better than his own wife. According to the carrier hired to take the recently married couple’s possessions to their new home in Windsor, Fred had ridden in the coach with his canary, while Emily was made to travel on her own to the house by tram. And after the murder, Fred could be seen riding around in a sulky, parading the canary in its elegant and ornate cage.

“He would talk to the bird as if it were human,” Kate remembered. “At times he would recount his exploits around the world, talking for hours on end about his heroic adventures on the high seas and fighting the Zulus. Sometimes I would hear him laugh with the bird, like they were telling the gayest jokes. Other times I would hear him speak in angry tones, usually about devilish things like disease, death and murder. Whenever he would talk to the canary about his mother, he would end up crying. It was all rather sad, and very strange. Like I have said, we all thought he was mad, but never did I think he was capable of such horrific things – nor did I ever suspect he had killed his previous wife and three children. It turns my blood cold thinking I slept so close to him all that time we were aboard the ship.”

On the subject of Fred being Jack the Ripper, Kate gave a nervous laugh and said, “It’s hard to imagine an Englishman doing such ghastly work as what Jack did to those fallen women – even knowing what Albert did to his two wives and children. And yet...” Kate’s face drew long and distant. “Now that I think back, there was something in his eyes that scared me. In those moments of madness, when he would stomp about the ship claiming his property had been stolen, I wanted desperately to be away from him. Still, I do find it hard to believe that Albert could’ve committed those crimes in Whitechapel. I know that’s what the papers have been saying, but I can’t quite come at the idea.”

Another passenger aboard the
Kaiser Wilhelm II
also finds it difficult to come at the idea of Deeming being the notorious Whitechapel murderer. “I knew both Mr. and Mrs. Williams well,” Alphalton corn merchant Sydney Oakes said. “I became rather good friends with the pair whilst travelling on the steamer heading for Melbourne. It was true, Albert could be a little unusual, but he was always affectionate towards Emily. I saw nothing but love there, which makes it so hard for me to comprehend that Albert could’ve killed Emily in such a way. Still, there was nothing about the man that ever made me think he was capable of the atrocities committed in Whitechapel four years ago. He boasted of murder, but always in reference to black fellows. And with his strong Lancashire accent and generally charming way about him – no, I can’t see Albert stalking the streets of London’s East End, slaughtering loose women.”

When asked why he thought Deeming had murdered his wife, Oakes stuttered and started preening his moustache. “It had to have been an accident,” Oakes finally answered. “They probably argued, and Deeming accidentally struck his wife and killed her. I’m sure he didn’t mean to do it. I guess he panicked and, not wanting to be caught, buried her under the hearthstone.” Didn’t Mr. Oakes meet up with Deeming in January, only a week or so after Deeming had murdered his wife? “That’s correct. We had a drink at the Baths Hotel in Bourke Street.” I asked Oakes what Deeming’s disposition was like during that meeting. “He seemed like his old self – charming, gay and ever boastful. He riled some of the patrons in the bar with his flamboyant talk and gestures. I thought there was going to be a brawl.” Didn’t he think it strange that a man who had brutally killed his wife only a week before could act so brazenly cheerful? “Maybe it was simply his way of coping. Or maybe he genuinely had no remorse. It’s hard to say. I never saw him again after that. Next time I heard about Albert Williams, they were saying his real name was Frederick Deeming and that he was suspected of killing his wife, Emily. I have to say, that threw me. I still have trouble placing that man with such horrible deeds. And I still can’t believe that body I saw in the morgue was Emily. It didn’t even look human, let alone a lady I knew to be so kind and sweet.” Mr. Oakes got up from his kitchen table then and poured himself a glass of gin. “Poor Emily,” he muttered.

Poor Emily indeed. The 26-year-old from Rainhill, had no idea about her new husband’s past, nor what he had planned for her. And Fred Deeming certainly had her murder planned. It was no accident, no spur-of-the-moment act of violence that saw her end up buried in concrete under the hearthstone of the bedroom fireplace with her skull smashed and her throat cut.

It was only two days after landing in the British colony’s second largest city that Fred Deeming went to a local ironmonger and bought all the tools needed to help conceal his wife’s dead body under the house in the hope that the body would never be found – or at least, not discovered until long after he had left Australia.

The owner of the ironmonger shop in High Street, John Woods, remembers Deeming as both a flamboyant character, and a surly man. “When he first came into my shop, he was a loud, larger-than-life character. He wore lots of expensive-looking jewellery, and spoke with a distinct English accent. Along with his large ginger moustache, he stood out like a fishmonger at the opera. The man, who called himself Drewn, ordered from me cement, sand, a broom, spade, a pan and a trowel. He was pleasant, if a little brusque at times. However, a different man entered my store the next day. He claimed that the tools and materials had never been delivered to his house as ordered. His manner was cold, angry and quite frankly, he unnerved me. His eyes held a kind of blankness, and I could see him spiralling into a rage at a moment’s notice, so I swallowed my pride – I was sure his order had been delivered – and took all the materials he had ordered the previous day personally to his house in Windsor. On the way, Drewn explained to me that he needed the items for work in his yard, however, when I arrived at the house, I noticed that the yard was in no need of work. I made the comment that the yard seemed perfectly fine to me. Drewn looked frazzled, and in a huffy tone, said that it wasn’t the yard that needed work, but a copper boiler. Well, that seemed fine too, but I kept quiet this time. The man was clearly riled up enough already, and I didn’t fancy pressing him. So, after dumping the tools and materials at his house, I left. I was already uncomfortable in the man’s presence, but his strange behaviour regarding the items and their purpose simply compounded my unease. When the police came to me months later to ask me about Drewn and I learnt of the dreadful nature in which Drewn had done away with his missus, I felt ill. To think, it was my materials and tools he used to seal his wife’s body under the fireplace.” Mr. Woods, a slim, middle-aged man with striking black hair and beard, shuddered noticeably as he stood behind the counter in his shop. Though he could not have had any way of knowing the diabolical use that Fred Deeming had for the cement, trowel and other items, the knowledge that he had sold Deeming these things obviously still weighed heavily on his shoulders.

Mr. Woods isn’t the only person to have feelings of guilt. Though, like Mr. Woods, he couldn’t have known what was to happen, the owner of the Andrew Street house, local butcher John Stamford, regrets letting the house to Mr. Deeming.

“I was fooled by his air of respectability,” said Mr. Stamford. “Here was this finely-dressed Englishman, wanting to rent my house. How was I to know he was a scoundrel and a cold-blooded murderer? Christ, I didn’t even know the bloke’s name till later, when he came to my shop with a small parcel, telling me he was going to mend some nail holes in the wall of the house. Cement he reckons was in the parcel! Blimey, it was probably the knife he used to do away with his missus.”

Stamford’s estate agent, Mr. Charles Connop, also admits to being fooled by the Englishman’s noble exterior. “I only met him a couple of times. He seemed like a perfectly reasonable gentleman to me. He paid a month’s rent for the house on Andrew Street, even though he clearly hadn’t planned on staying that long. He must’ve had it all planned out in his head before ever setting foot in Melbourne. I met his wife, too, once. She seemed like a timid creature – pretty, but quiet. What a horrible end she came to.”

And so, with the house rented and with all the tools necessary to cover up the dastardly deed, Fred Deeming was all set to murder his new bride. He had the madness to carry it out, and the cold cunning to cover the evidence.

In the next part of this special report, we’ll take a look at the crime itself, speak to those who discovered the ghoulish burial site, as well as neighbours who say they have seen and heard strange things in the Andrew Street house. We’ll also take you inside the murder house, so be forewarned – only the strong of heart need continue reading about this most ghastly of crimes.

 

THE ARGUS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1892

 

 

MAD FRED PART 2

 

 

—♦—

 

A MOST HORRIBLE CRIME UNCOVERED

 


 

A TOUR THROUGH THE DEATH HOUSE

 


 

GHOSTLY SIGHTINGS

 

57 Andrew Street is a small, unassuming brick cottage. It sits by the side of a narrow, unpaved street in the modest suburb of Windsor, flanked by other modest, but attractive brick and weatherboard houses. Standing outside its front fence, pretty shrubs adorning the front lawn, it’s hard to believe that such a ghastly crime could have been committed inside.

BOOK: Tales of Sin and Madness
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