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Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley

9. Hannah Mary Tabbs

Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley

BBC

Personal Journals, True Crime, History, Society & Culture

4.7908 Ratings

🗓️ 25 July 2022

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Lucy Worsley investigates the crimes of Victorian women from a contemporary, feminist perspective.

This time, Lucy explores the case of Hannah Mary Tabbs, who was very good at being very bad.

An African-American woman living in Philadelphia in the 1880s, Hannah Mary was arrested after the discovery of the headless, limbless torso of her lover, Wakefield Gaines.

With the help of Philadelphian historian Annie Anderson, Lucy discovers what life was like for African-American women living in the city only two decades after the end of slavery. Social reformers, keen to promote their interests, encouraged black women to adopt high moral standards of temperance, modesty, deference, and strict sexual mores.

But as Lucy discovers with Professor Kali Nicole Gross who has written a book about the case, Hannah Mary Tabbs was having none of this. She lived life on her own terms, blurring her identity, lying when it suited her and intimidating others to turn a blind eye to her affair with a man 10 years her junior.

We hear Hannah Mary’s own words as she tried to talk her way out of trouble by attempting to shift blame to the man co-accused of killing her lover.

To gain a contemporary perspective, Lucy and Kali ask how reliable the confessions extracted from black suspects by white police officers are, even now. To what extent is racial profiling relevant to this case? And what does this case say about the relationship between the black and white communities in the US?

And, we find out what really happened to Wakefield Gaines at the hands of Hannah Mary Tabbs.

Producer: Jane Greenwood Readers: Moya Angela and Jonathan Keeble Sound Design: Chris Maclean

A StoryHunter production for BBC Radio 4

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the shocking moment English football has been dreading.

0:05.0

My name is Moses Swaybu and I used to be a professional footballer.

0:08.5

But then I got in deep with organised crime and became a match fixer operating in the English League.

0:14.0

A match fixing investigator has highlighted two matches he says appear to have

0:19.0

suspicious betting patterns.

0:21.0

How honesty are you going to be with me?

0:22.3

This is 100%.

0:23.0

Join me. Sports Strangers Crimes presents. Confessions of a match fixer.

0:27.0

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:30.0

BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts.

0:34.8

This is Lady Killers, where history meets true crime from BBC Radio 4 with me Lucy Worsley.

0:46.1

I'm joined by a crack team of all female detectives

0:49.5

to investigate the ordinary lives and extraordinary crimes of Victorian murder

0:54.8

arrests.

0:55.8

Please be aware that this episode contains material and language

1:00.3

which you might find distressing.

1:01.9

This is the story. which you might find distressing.

1:10.0

This is the story of a woman who was very good at being very bad. On Wednesday last at Broad Street Station, a tall, dark-skinned colored woman boarded the 627 out of Philadelphia,

1:18.0

on which train I was the conductor.

1:21.0

She carried two bundles, one large and one small, wrapped in brown paper and calico.

1:26.0

The woman left a lasting impression on me because as soon as she reached her seat,

1:31.0

she opened the window.

...

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