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Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley

57. Jessie McLachlan - Silenced Servant

Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley

BBC

True Crime, History

4.7908 Ratings

🗓️ 3 February 2026

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Lucy Worsley meets Jessie McLachlan, a woman accused of murdering one of her friends in Glasgow in 1862. There’s no obvious motive, but if she didn’t do it, who did?

To investigate this infamous case, Lucy is joined by stellar barrister Jennifer Robinson, co-author of Silenced Women: Why the Law Fails Women and How to Fight Back, who has represented actor Amber Heard and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, working on cases that span media, public and international law.

The victim in this distressing story is a live-in domestic servant, who works for three generations of men in a respectable Glaswegian home. When her mutilated body is found in a locked room, the police are quick to arrest her elderly employer, the most obvious suspect. However, blame soon shifts to Jessie McLachlan, once a servant in the same house, who maintains her innocence throughout. Who will the jury believe? Will Jessie ever get to tell her side of the story? Even if she does, will anyone bother to listen?

Together, Lucy and Jennifer discuss the difficulties women still face in speaking out about their experiences of gender-based violence and how the law is often weaponised against them. They are joined by in-house historian Professor Rosalind Crone from The Open University to look at the role of the media in this case. They discover that today, media coverage continues to have a powerful impact, either in entrenching negative stereotypes or, more hopefully, shining a light on women’s stories and bringing perpetrators to justice.

With thanks to Glasgow Police Museum for assistance with research.

Producer: Sarah Goodman Readers: Clare Corbett, Bill Hope, Jonathan Keeble and Ruth Sillers Sound design: Chris Maclean Executive producer: Kirsty Hunter

A StoryHunter production for BBC Radio 4

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts.

0:07.6

Resolutions, ideas of being different.

0:10.3

Can we create long-lasting change?

0:12.2

Doctors Chris and Zand Van Tullochin are on a mission to help us take better care of ourselves.

0:17.1

You tried, it didn't work, what could you put in place?

0:20.2

And chartered psychologist Kimberly Wilson is on hand to help make sense of mental health.

0:25.2

We are constantly being told what's wrong with us, but there's so much that's right with us.

0:30.7

Reset and recharge with What's Up Docks and Complex with Kimberly Wilson. Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:40.3

Welcome to Lady Killers with me, Lucy Worsley, from BBC Radio 4.

0:46.0

This is where true crime meets history with a twist.

1:02.1

This time we're investigating the Sandiford Murder, a horrific crime in Victorian Glasgow.

1:06.9

Please be aware that this episode contains material that some listeners might find distressing.

1:13.4

He's an old murderer. He did the deed. She's been lying there all this time,

1:20.4

and me in the house. The guilty has got out and the innocent is kept in. My life's in your power,

1:28.6

and yours is in my power. Join me and my crack team of all female detectives as we travel back in time and bring our present-day feminist perspective to historical crime.

1:33.8

We meet real women from the past and ask,

1:37.1

how do their lives resemble our own?

1:40.0

What, if anything, has changed?

1:42.8

And what can we learn from history that might benefit women in the future?

1:48.1

We're heading to Sandiford Place, Glasgow.

1:52.0

In 1862, it's home to the Fleming family.

1:56.5

Three generations of Fleming men, all single,

...

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