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Blood Ties Podcast

S12 Ep3: Pottery Cottage, Part One

Blood Ties Podcast

Peter Shevlin

Society & Culture, 415885

4.4610 Ratings

🗓️ 29 January 2023

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, Geoffrey discusses the terrible case of Pottery Cottage. This is the first of a two part series. Join our community on Patreon, where you can access bonus content, listen to our podcasts ad-free, and more! https://www.patreon.com/bloodtiespodcast CREDITS: Producer: Sam Brain Artwork: George Leigh Music: Dan Wansell CONTACT: Twitter: @BloodTies_Pod Instagram: bloodties_pod Email: [email protected]

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello everyone. Welcome back to Blood Ties. I'm Geoffrey Wansaw. I'm here on my own today

0:19.4

because Molly, as ever, he's jolly busy. But I thought I'd doansaw. I'm here on my own today because Molly, as ever, is jolly busy.

0:22.5

But I thought I'd do a story that I think is one of the most remarkable in British criminal history,

0:30.0

although comparatively little told, for reasons that become clear as we go through.

0:36.1

It is both dramatic and tragic. What I would say is it's

0:44.3

one of those ones that lives in the mind long after you've heard it. So if you're up for this and prepared for it, this is a story of pottery cottage.

1:08.4

Our story begins in HMP Lester with an in

1:18.6

inmate called William Hughes who was born in Preston in Lancashire on the 8th of August, 1946.

1:30.1

He's the first of six children.

1:33.9

But I'm afraid he was pretty difficult from the outset.

1:39.1

He was given to terrible antisocial behaviour.

1:42.7

And he got his first arrest for petty theft at the age of 14.

1:49.0

Unfortunately, he then became a litany of unhappiness.

1:54.0

He went to approved school. They were then approved schools in this country.

1:59.0

We were talking about 1997, 76.

2:02.6

He then went to Borstal and the first of his multiple prison terms came in

2:08.6

1966 at the age of 20.

2:12.6

He had a reputation for violence which brought him the nickname of Mad Billy.

2:23.0

Nevertheless, in 1972, he married a mother of one called Jean,

2:29.7

and they had a daughter together called Nicola, who was born in August 1972.

2:35.3

But Billy Hughes, mad Billy, was constantly on the move, constantly in trouble with the law.

2:45.9

And the relationship didn't go well.

...

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