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Foul Play: A Historical True Crime Podcast

The Longest Inquest

Foul Play: A Historical True Crime Podcast

Shane L. Waters, Wendy Cee, Gemma Hoskins

History, True Crime, Society & Culture

4.5 • 992 Ratings

🗓️ 24 March 2026

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Content Warning

This episode contains discussions of adultery, abortion, and Victorian scandal. Support resources are listed at the end of these notes.

This Episode

Season 39: The Balham Mystery. For twenty-three days, the secrets of The Priory were stripped bare in the longest inquest in English legal history. Forty witnesses. Thousands of pages of testimony. Florence Bravo finally forced to admit her affair. Dr. Gully humiliated on the stand.

Every scandal exposed. And still no murderer named.

The Victim

Charles Bravo's death demanded answers. The open verdict of the first inquest—held in private, concluded in three days—satisfied no one. His family demanded justice. The newspapers demanded scandal. On May 15th, 1876, the Attorney General ordered an unprecedented second inquest.

What followed was theatre as much as justice. The Bedford Hotel in Balham was transformed into a makeshift courtroom. Crowds queued for hours to witness proceedings. The Attorney General himself, Sir John Holker, took personal charge—an extraordinary intervention for a coroner's inquest.

The Crime

Florence Bravo had avoided testifying at the first inquest. Her doctor declared her too ill to appear. This time, there would be no escape.

On July 13th, 1876, Florence walked to the witness stand in mourning clothes—black from head to toe. Sir John Holker's questions began gently, then turned to the matter everyone had come to hear.

"Mrs. Bravo, were you acquainted with Dr. James Manby Gully?"

"I was."

"And what was the nature of that acquaintance?"

The room held its breath. Then Florence spoke the words that would define her forever.

"Dr. Gully and I were... intimately connected. For approximately two years."

The crowd erupted. Florence Bravo's reputation died in that moment. But she held firm: she had not killed her husband. She did not know who had.

The Investigation

Jane Cannon Cox faced far more hostile questioning. Her alleged confession—"I took poison. Don't tell Florence"—was the foundation of the suicide theory. Now it crumbled under scrutiny.

Sir John Holker walked her through April 18th minute by minute. The housemaid Mary Ann Keeber heard no confession. The doctors received none. Only Mrs. Cox, alone and uncorroborated, claimed Charles had taken responsibility for his own death.



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey friend, I'm Shane. Every week my brother Josh, our editor Kim, and I, sit down to explore the unexplained, hauntings, cryptids, cold cases with no earthly explanation.

0:10.0

Now here's the thing, Josh, he's the believer, me, I'm the skeptic. And Kim, she's hearing all of it for the first time, reacting exactly the way you would.

0:19.0

It's like sitting around a campfire with

0:21.4

friends who can't agree on whether ghosts are real. And honestly, that's what makes it fun.

0:25.3

The Haunted Bunker. Search for it wherever you listen and come hang out with us.

0:32.9

For 23 days, the whole of England watched.

0:38.6

The secrets of the priory were stripped bare before a jury and a fascinated public.

0:45.3

The second inquest into the death of Charles Bravo became the longest in English legal

0:50.6

history.

0:53.0

Forty witnesses, thousands of pages of testimony.

0:57.0

Every salacious detail of Florence Bravo's past

1:01.0

for affair with an elderly doctor, a secret abortion,

1:06.0

a marriage built on lies,

1:09.0

exposed in a courtroom packed with spectators who came for a scandal and received

1:15.5

more than what they bargained for.

1:18.4

Hello, friend.

1:20.5

Welcome back to foul play.

1:23.2

I'm Shane Waters, and this is episode four of our season on the Bala mystery.

1:29.6

We followed Charles Bravo from his controversial marriage to Florence Ricardo,

1:35.5

through his agonizing three-day death from antimony poisoning,

1:40.5

to the open verdict and the first inquest that satisfied no one.

1:46.1

Now we enter the main event.

...

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