By 7:00pm, with still no sign of Fanny, and with about an hour until sunset, Harriet Adams began to panic. Since many of the men had returned home from work, a search party quickly descended on the Hop garden. They found what they were looking for almost immediately.
Fanny's head was discovered by laborer Thomas Gates, who was a veteran of the Charge of the Light Brigade. The girl's head was stuck atop two hop poles. jammed into her neck, her blood stained hair drawing attention. Her naked torso was nearby. Her arms and legs had been roughly cut and ripped away and scattered haphazardly. One foot was found, still in a shoe. And clutched firmly in one palm were the two penny which Baker had given to Fanny. The contents of her pelvis and chest, including her heart, liver and intestines, had been removed and tossed about the hop garden.
Her eyes were found in the shallow River Wey (above). Did Frederick think throwing her eyes in the river was going to keep anyone from seeing what he had done? House painter, William Walker, recovered a large stone from the hop garden, smeared with blood and strands of blond hair and flesh.
When what had happened to Fanny was undeniable, Harriet collapsed with grief. George, when he returned home, retrieved his shotgun - another sign of his middle class status. Friends were able to get the weapon out of his hands, and offer some comfort and beer.
Alton Police Superintendent William Cheyney was already familiar with Fredrick Baker (above). In his short time in Alton, Baker had already been arrested for drunkenness and for fighting. About 9:00pm that Saturday night, Cheyney found his suspect still in Clement's law offices and arrested him. Baker insisted he knew nothing about Fanny's murder.
And then, to protect him from the angry crowd already gathering on the High Street, Cheyney slipped the suspect out the back door and escorted him down the street to the safety of the police station (above). There Baker was searched. In his pant pockets they found two small knives. Spots of blood were observed on his shirt cuffs. And his trousers were soaking wet, indicating they had been washed recently. When asked about the blood, Baker remained "cool and collected" and claimed the blood was his own, but could not point to any cuts.
The following day was a Sunday. After church services, search parties returned to the hop garden where they recovered a few more random parts of Fanny's body and most of her clothing, ripped and cut into shreds. However they never found her hat.
On Monday morning, 26 August, while Alton's meager police force (above, in front of their station) guarded the prisoner, Superintendent Cheyney returned to the law offices and searched Baker's desk. In it he found a daily diary, written in Fredrick's hand. The entry for Saturday, 24 August, 1867 read, "Killed a young girl. It was fine and hot."
Tuesday evening, 27 August, saw the inquest before Deputy County Coroner Robert Harfield at the Duke's Head Inn (above). Fanny's poor body, now sewn together as best it could be, was presented as evidence. Superintendent Cheyney filled in the details of Baker's arrest, and the contents of his diary. When asked if he had anything to say, Fredrick Baker replied, "No, sir. Only that I am innocent." The jury quickly returned a verdict of "willful murder against Fredrick Baker for killing and slaying Fanny Adams".
On Wednesday, 28 August they laid Sweet Fanny Adams to rest in the Alton Cemetery, some 1,500 feet from what had been her home. The Reverend W. Wilkins delivered the graveside address to a crowd of hundreds. Initially her grave marker was wooden, but in 1872 it was replaced with a head stone. Shortly after the funeral the Adams family left Alton. Harriet never returned. In his old age George came back once, to spend time at Fanny's grave.
On Thursday morning, 29 August, the London newspapers were filled with the gory details. The Standard claimed, "No tiger of the jungle, no jackal...could so fearfully have mutilated it's victim." And the Daily Telegraph described the murderer as "...a ferocious human being...(who could) take a girl child...and after unspeakably brutish treatment, chop her body into pieces and scatter them about.."
That same day the Alton magistrates held their trial in the town hall and formalized the coroner's jury verdict. Fredrick Baker was then transported twenty miles to the southwest to Winchester Prison (above) where he was to be tried at the next assizes by a crown court. Anger in the crowds had reached a pitch, and it was only by forceful police action that Baker was safely escaped justice in Alton.
The assizes were English and Welsh crown courts presided over by visiting judges. They usually considered only the most serious criminal charges, and Baker's murder trial was set for Thursday, 5 December, 1867, in the Great Hall of Winchester Castle (above) under what purported to have been King Arthur's round table, now on the wall. It's still there.
The trial was presided over by 58 year old Judge John Mellon (above). Minnie Warner was carried into the court room to testify under oath that Fredrick Baker was the man who had walked off with Fanny Adams. The defense grilled her intensely, but she never wavered. Then Mrs. Gardner testified about her encounter with Baker, just after 5:00pm.
Perhaps the most damning new testimony came from Professor A.S. Taylor (above) from Guy's Hospital in London. He had done a full autopsy of the battered corpse and had discovered the body had been mutilated after death, but while still warm. He also explained that one of the knives found in Baker's pockets had a small amount of coagulated human blood on the blade.
The defense pleaded insanity. The Barrister , Mr. Carter, described Baker as "a weak, puny, excitable character", who had moved to Alton after a suicide attempt, brought on by a broken engagement. His father, a Guildford tailor, had ...shown an inclination to assault, even to kill, his children", and attacked
Fredrick and his sister with a fireplace poker. The sister had later died of a "brain fever", and a cousin had been hospitalized in mental institutions four separate times. None of this mitigating evidence had any effect on the jury.
They took 15 minutes to find Baker guilty of the murder of Fanny Adams. Judge Mellon immediately sentenced Fredrick to be hanged.
Sitting in his cell in Winchester prison (above), Frederick Baker composed a message to George and Harriet Adams. He wrote that he was sorry for having murdered their Fanny, and had done it in “an unguarded hour” and only then because she would not stop crying. It was done, he insisted without “malice aforethought” and without “…pain or struggle”. Frederick assured the grieving parents he had not molested Fanny, but he offered no other explanation as to why she had been crying when he had smashed her head with the rock. He signed his apology, "From a guilty but repentant culprit, Frederick Baker." Christmas Eve morning, at 8:00am sharp, Fredrick Baker had a noose slipped around his neck and pulled tight. Then the trap door he stood on was opened.
During his fifty year career as a hangman, William Calcraft (above), ushered some 450 souls to their final reward, and Fredrick Baker's execution would be far from his last job, although it would be one of the last public hangings. The problem was, "Short Drop" Calcraft was "particularly incompetent" at his job.
It was Calcraft’s technique of dropping his subjects no more than 18 inches which insured all 450 would take from three to four minutes to slowly strangle to death, kicking and writhing as Fredrick Baker did, in full view of the 5,000 people (mostly women) gathered to witness his well earned demise. And the confession Baker had made and the denial it included were simply final proof that Fredrick Baker was a liar to the very last moment of his life.
Later that morning technicians from Madame Trussauds' took a death mask of Fredrick Baker, and within 10 days he took his place in the museum's Chamber of Horrors on London's Baker Street - item number 223 in their 1868 catalogue. His head mold was destroyed on 9 September, 1940 during the Nazi bombing blitz.
The execution of Frederick Baker, was as gruesome as any parent of a murdered child might wish. But his slow agony did nothing to save the lives of the uncounted children who have followed Fanny.
But every child saved during the vital first three hours of an abduction by an Amber Alert, must thank Donna and Jimmy Hagerman, who in 1996 pushed to change the way U.S. police respond to child abductions, after their daughter, Amber Hagerman (above) was kidnaped and murdered. And those children saved by Amber's sacrifice can also thank those who ask questions of these monsters in our midst, rather than simply calling for their blood. Spilling blood may be a just punishment, but it has never saved a life.
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