There are two sources published in 1684. That reproduced here spells the name as "Ridgway," the other uses "Ridgeway" (John Newton, A True Relation of the Fact, Trial, Carriage and Death of Ridgeway, London: Richard Chiswell, 1684).
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This long title from 1684 book relating Ridgway’s story summarizes the case (archaic spelling is preserved):
A True relation of four most barbarous and cruel murders committed in Leicester-shire by Elizabeth Ridgway; The Like not Known in any Age. With the Particulars of Time, Place, (and other Circumstances) how she first poisoned her own Mother; after that, a Fellow Servant; then her Sweet-Heart; and last of all her Husband; for all which Tragical Murders the being brought to Justice, was Tryed, and found Guilty, at the late Lent-Assizes held for the said County: and for the same, was Burnt to Death, on Monday the 24th. of March, 1684.
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This long title from 1684 book relating Ridgway’s story summarizes the case (archaic spelling is preserved):
A True relation of four most barbarous and cruel murders committed in Leicester-shire by Elizabeth Ridgway; The Like not Known in any Age. With the Particulars of Time, Place, (and other Circumstances) how she first poisoned her own Mother; after that, a Fellow Servant; then her Sweet-Heart; and last of all her Husband; for all which Tragical Murders the being brought to Justice, was Tryed, and found Guilty, at the late Lent-Assizes held for the said County: and for the same, was Burnt to Death, on Monday the 24th. of March, 1684.
[Printed by Geo. Croom, 1684]
(Full text available free on Google books)
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More cases: Female Serial Killers Executed
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[2988-6/27/19]
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4 murders:
Mary Husbands,
mother.
Male servant,
co-worker.
Mid-Aug. 1683 –
John King, paramour.
Mid-Jan. 1684
– John Ridgway, husband; killed within a week of their marriage.
Intended
victims:
William Corbet
Richared
Tilley
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This long title from 1684 book relating Ridgway’s story
summarizes the case (archaic spelling is preserved):
A True relation of four most barbarous and cruel MURDERS
committed in Leicester-shire by ELIZABETH RIDGWAY; The Like not Known in any
Age. With the Particulars of Time, Place, (and other Circumstances) how she
first poisoned her own Mother; after that, a Fellow Servant; then her
Sweet-Heart; and last of all her Husband; for all which Tragical Murders the
being brought to Justice, was Tryed, and found Guilty, at the late Lent-Assizes
held for the said County: and for the same, was Burnt to Death, on Monday the
24th. of March, 1684.
[Printed by Geo. Croom, 1684]
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Original spellings retained with the exception to the archaic “s” letter [f] which has been changed to the modern form. [updated Jun. 24, 2016]
Original spellings retained with the exception to the archaic “s” letter [f] which has been changed to the modern form. [updated Jun. 24, 2016]
FULL TEXT: A Dam being
once fallen from the State of Innocency and driven from that Paradise of Pleasure
and Security wherein God had placed
him, instead of the sublime Life, to be as God,
which the Devil Had promised upon Eating the
Forbidden Fruit, he put them upon the Destruction of one
another, and such a Depravedness
had Sin in those early Days brought upon their
Nature, that the greatest, piece of Manhood we first hear of, was an Endeavour to destroy Humane Kind.
And, that the Arch-Enemy of Man might effect the utter Destruction of that Creature whose Excellent Creation he so much
envied, whilst yet there was but a few in the World, he set one Brother to murder the other,
even before any pretended Occasion, or Quarrel, could be alledged.
As the People increased in After-Ages,
the fame Enemy of Mankind stirred up Murders, Rapines, Bloodshed, and all
things that tended to the Destruction of Humane Society,
Nation against Nation, and Family against
Family;
which, since the World hath been Peopled, Languages and Kingdoms Divided, has gotten a fairer
Title than that of Murder.
But of all Murders none so
plainly discovers the inherent Cruelty and Enmity
which Sin has lodged in Humane Nature, as those committed by private Persons, upon Premeditation who,
though by the Laws of the Land
Protected from open Violence one against another, yet, will take upon them to
revenge every little Difference, or conceived Displeasure, by the private Murder of the
Dearest Friend they have. Of which latter sort, a fresher and more barbarous
Example, certainly, has not in this Age been heard of, than what I have now to relate from Leicestershire
a Female of that Country having out-done the Desperadoes
of this Town for Cruelty, whose often Excesses in Drinking, Debaucheries amongst Women, and Heats of Blood produced therefrom,
a little palliates for their
Crimes, as more the Effect of
Rashness and Madness, than the Bloodiness of their Natures.
Elizabeth Ridgway, late Wife of William Ridgway, (a Taylor at
Ipstocke, a Village near Besworth in Leicestershire, three Miles from Market Besworth) being the
fatal Subject of this Relation;
She was the Daughter of Husbands, a Farmer, who lived in that or
a neighbouring Village, with whom he was brought
up, and continued untill she was about 29 Years of Age, being always looked upon
as a Religious Maid, and a Follower of the Presbyterians; yet, as appears, she was a Wolf in a Lamb’s Skin, or
rather, a Devil in the Shape of
a Saint, and great Cause to believe, that for
eight years past, at the least (if not longer) she had been such: Yet, the
first of her Tragical Actions that came to publick Discovery, was committed about three years since, when, she Poysoned her own Mother, (viz. Mary Husbands) for no other Provocation,
that was known, but some falling out about their Houshold Affairs, or being
reproved by her said Mother for some other thing she disliked in her.
Her Mother being dispatched, she kept her Fathers House about the spice of a Year after that, went
to Service, and had not long been there, but a
Young-man who was one of her Fellow
Servants having some Difference with her, she seemed to put it up, as her manner was, never Scolding it
out, but rather, being of a dogged, sullen Humour, kept her Malice to her self.
But soon after their said Difference, the young-man
died suddenly, to the Admiration of the Family, by
reason he was a healthful, temperate Fellow, and
never complained of any Illness till a few Hours before his Death, when
the Poyson was working upon him. Her way of Poysoning was, by mixing White Mercury or other Powder, in their
Broath, or Drink.
These two Murthered Persons were
buried, without Discovery of the Murderer, and she
past on untill August last, when, having two Sweet-Hearts, or Young men
that Courted her in Marriage, viz.
one John King a Servant, to Mr. Paget
of Ipstocke, and William Ridgway, a
Taylor, of the same Town or Village, it so fell out that
she seeming to have the greatest Liking to William Ridgway, as being a House-Keeper that had two Apprentices, and lived in some Repute and before she knew which she liked
best, having been so free with the other as
that she thought he might be some Trouble to her, she resorted to her old
Trade, and continued to keep the said John King Company untill she had an Opportunity
to season him some Draught which sent him into the other World. This third
Murder she accomplish’d about the middle of August, and past part of the
Winter in Service, untill after Christmas she was
married to the Unfortunate Taylor William
Ridgway with whom she had not lived above a Week but they hapned [sic] to
have some Falling-out, yet such, as that Ridgway told her, he doubted he should have an uncomfortable Wife
of her, or said some Words to that effect. However, their Difference seemed to
be composed, and they went lovingly together to Ashby
Delazouch Market to buy some Houshold-stuff; but in a Fortnight after their Falling-out, being in all about three Weeks
after the Marriage she gave him some Broath, wherein she had put White
Mercury; at eating of which, he found great Fault, in the hearing of one or
both the Apprentices, saying, something was in them
more than ordinary, find
that it grated in his Teeth: but notwithstanding that Dislike, he eat
so much as worked his Destruction; for he soon sell
into a very sad Condition, and died after they had
been married three Weeks and two Days.
He was buried without any publick Discovery
of his being Poysoned: But the time of her Diabolical
Actions drawing near a Determination, or rather the Divine justice now
overtaking such horrid and unnatural Sins, this fourth Murder caused a
Discontent amongst the Neighbourhood, who not being able to prove any thing
against her, it rested some days, untill she
attempted to Poyson her two Apprentices also, making her fifth
Attempt upon Richard
Tilley, her youngest apprentice, seasoning his Broath with her Wonted
ingredients; but the Boy a little alarum’d by the Complaint his Master made of
his Broath, or having watched her more narrowly, positively refused to eat his
poysoned Broath; at which the pretending
Anger, took them up and threw them away; the Boy repaired as soon as possible,
and acquainted his Father therewith, and how his Dame had thrown the Porridge
away because he refused them, as likewise he had observed her to throw some
that were left in his Master’s Dish, away; the former Suspicion then grew into
a Flame; she was seized, and carried before Sir Beaumont Dixey, a neighboring Justice of Peace, where all the
Circumstances of Suspicion were charged against her, but more especially that
of her Husband’s Death; who, after he had been buried eight days, was taken up
again, and viewed; but ‘tis most remarkable, That when John Ridgway, the Father of the Deceased, forced her to touch the
dead Body (which she was very averse to) it burst out at Nose and Mouth
Bleeding, as fresh as if new Stabbed: howbeit, her Instructor in those wicked
Practices, to secure her for his own, kept her from any penitent
Acknowledgment; but on the contrary, she persisted in constant Denial of all
that was charged against her, that she had either Poysoned her Husband or any
other Person.
The Coroner being sent for, had such
strong Evidence, that upon his Inquest, William
Ridgway was found to be Poysoned, and said Elizabeth thereupon committed to
Leicester Goal. At the Assizes, which
in some Weeks after was held for that County, she was brought to Tryal,
continuing in her Denial: but the said Inquest taken by the Coroner, with the
concurring Evidence of the Boy hearing his Master’s Complaint of the Broath and
upon a strict Inquiry, having been found out that she had bought White
Mercury at Abby Delazouch Market when (he went with her said Husband
to buy Houshold stuff, (and soon after their Falling-out) also that when the Boy refused the Porridge, and that he found he suspected her,
she desired him to say nothing of her throwing the Porridge away, but that if he would be good to her she would be good to
him with several other strong Circumstances that at least she had poysoned her
Husband: and she being thereof found Guilty, received Sentence to be Burnt to Ashes at the Common
Place of Execution for that County.
After Sentence, great Endeavours were used by many to work
in her a Confession, and Remorse of such barbarous Crimes; all which proved ineffectual till the very Morning
(viz. on Monday the 24th. of March.
1684.) that she was to be Executed; when she perceiving
she must dye, and that her Denials would avail her
nothing, confess’d, that for eight years past she had lain with a
Familiar Spirit, who at her first Contract with him,
tempted her to poyson her self, which she refused; and after that tempted her to poyson any one that offended her;
that she had, during the said years, constantly concealed
Poyson in her Hair, and upon all Occasions renewed it at several
Markets: she confess’d the Murdering of her Mother, of her
Fellow-Servant, and of her Sweet-heart, to be for the Reasons herein mentioned
also, that when married she did not love her Husband, and therefore Poysoned him;
that she intended to have Poisoned her two
Apprentices, Richard Tilley and
William Corbet; and last of all to have Poisoned her self.
She did not seem, very free in her Confession,
mentioning only those with whose Death she had been charged therefore it’s
thought in her eight years time many others, not taken
notice of died by her Malice,
by reason of the could not, to the very last, be brought
to any penitent Behaviour, refusing the Assistance of
two Eminent Divines who offered to go with her and assist
her at the Place of Execution, telling them, the
could Read and Pray as well as they could. Neither
would she add any thing more at the Stake, or repeat what she had before
confess’d; telling the People she had made a Confession
before she came out. She was kept great part of the Day in Prison, in
Expectation of a greater Discovery; and when at the Stake, a Spectator of two Brothers who were Executed for other Crimes (one of which might have had a Reprieve
if he would have hanged his Brother, and Executed
her, but refused it) all which having no other Effect than hath been related,
she was at length fastned to the Stake, much desiring they would let her be
hanged first, which not being granted, as soon as the Fire touched her she gave
one Shriek, and leaping besides the Block, with the
Rope and the Smoak she was soon choaked, and afterwards burnt according to the Sentence.
If any Reader question the Truth of
this Relation, or think the Author may have added thereto,
they may be satisfied to the contrary by William
Corbet, the eldest of the said Apprentices (one of them
that was attempted to be Poysoned) who upon the Death
of his Master being at Liberty, is come up to this Town, and lives now at the Swan in Shooe-makers Row in Black-Fryers,
As also by George Ridgway, the Brother of the
said William Ridgman
that was Poysoned, who lives at the Kings-Head
in Kings-street near the Queens
Garden.
FINIS.
LONDON, Printed by Geo. Croom, at the Sign of the Blew Ball
over against Baynard’s Castle in Thames-street. 1684.
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More cases: Female Serial Killers Executed
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