
The Victorian 'lady swindler' with 40 aliases who convinced an admiral to be her sugar daddy and tried to con an island of crofters
She was born into poverty as an illegitimate daughter of a Scots farm servant in the 19th century.
But despite being illiterate and uneducated, Annie Gordon Baillie forged herself a career as one of the Victorian era's most notorious con women.
She swindled charities, businesses and aristocrats in elaborate schemes spanning the globe.
And her remarkable story has now been retold as part of BBC Sounds podcast and Radio Four programme, Lady Swindlers with Lucy Worsley.
Gordon Baillie's cons included trying to relocate Skye crofters to marshland near Melbourne, Australia, and even inventing fake charities.
Her first crimes were running up massive debts in Dundee, where she moved in 1868 aged 20.
But then the scheming conwoman, who had 40 aliases and was dubbed the 'Queen of Swindlers' by the Press, moved onto different endeavours, raising money for a fictitious school for Protestant girls in Rome, Italy.
It proved to be a huge success, and the Peterhead-born crook fled with the cash raised to live the high life across Europe.
Sir Richard Duckworth-King, a retired admiral, fell under her spell and she managed to persuade him to fund her lifestyle with the equivalent of millions of pounds of his money.
And she was also involved in a land scheme involving Skye crofters - wading into a dispute between them.
Describing herself as the 'crofters' friend' to campaign for their rights, she travelled to Australia to secure new land for them to emigrate.
But her scheme crumbled when the islanders refused to move.
Historian Rosalind Crone said Gordon Baillie, who was born in 1848, evaded the law by exploiting loopholes in legislation which meant that you needed to prove illegal debtors had not intended to pay, while there was little oversight on charity work.
Ms Crone, who tells the story on the new podcast, told The Times: 'She is interesting because she gets away with it for so long.
'Gordon Baillie was certainly a prolific swindler and this case in particular is really interesting because of the different kinds of fraudulent activity that she's actually engaged with.
'She is taking goods and services on credit and not paying for it and she's also taking money for charities which didn't exist and also spun fictions in order to tap into particular social networks.'
Gordon Baillie's crimes were reported in newspapers at the time, including the Fife Herald (above)
Gordon Baillie had four children and was married to an opera singer - but her public profile brought her to the attention of Scotland Yard and she was soon connected to a string of frauds.
London-based Detective Inspector Henry Marshall, working with police in Edinburgh, tracked her across the country.
The 40-year-old conwoman was eventually arrested on June 23, 1888, and jailed for five years.
At a committal hearing Mr Marshall described her as an 'extraordinary woman' who was 'one of the greatest swindlers in the country'.
Aberdeen newspaper the Evening Gazette savaged her in a story titled 'A Queen of Swindlers' in 1888.
The report said: 'There has been a King of the beggars. Why should there not be a Queen of the Swindlers?
'If there should be, here is the candidate for the purple of that ancient craft.'
It added: 'There has never been quite such a bold, bad woman in her peculiar line, quite such a free hand, quite such a face of brass - and a handsome face withal.'
In reporting her release in 1892, London publication the Pall Mall Budget described her as having had 'one of the most extraordinary careers of deception on record'.
Once released she was caught stealing paintings and jailed for another seven years - and then later left Britain to find a new life in America.
Calling herself Louise JF Bailie, she soon found herself in trouble again.
She was last reported to have been sent to a New York workhouse, but little is known of any further movements or her death.
Ms Crone said: 'We love an antihero in history, we absolutely do. But it's very interesting the way in which particular Victorians who were very famous in their time quickly become forgotten.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
30 minutes ago
- The Sun
Embarrassing moment woman has shameless airport meltdown screaming & stamping feet after being told her bag was too big
THIS is the embarrassing moment a tourist has a shameless, child-like airport meltdown after being told her bag was too big. Jaw-dropping footage shows the holidaymaker screaming and stamping her feet as she pathetically lays on the floor of the terminal in northern Italy. 4 4 The holidaymaker from China had reached the boarding gate at the Milan Malpensa Airport when staff checked her carry-on luggage. They told her to pay extra for her heavy suitcase of throw away some of the contents - leading to the embarrassing meltdown. Footage shows the middle-aged woman wailing and yelling at the staff as she drops to the ground and rolls around on the ground in a bizarre reaction to the luggage situation. She was also captured stamping her feet up and down on the ground and waving her arms around. Authorities attempted to defuse the unbelievable situation -but to no avail - as the tourist continued her uncontrollable behaviour, according to local reports. Staff eventually removed her from the flight, with the woman left to book a new ticket for herself once she had stopped her meltdown. The clip has since gone viral on social media, with many viewers dubbing the bizarre tantrum "childish". One person said: "Has she forgotten that she's a grown up?" Another commented: "This is shameless and disgraceful behaviour." And a third: "I'm speechless. This is so embarrassing." A mere few days ago, a man was spotted running across the tarmac at London's Heathrow Airport near moving aircraft before being arrested. Video footage shared on social media sees the chase go on for around a minute before the man is eventually caught. And another horror moment shows a Qantas worker falls 20ft down from a plane's airbridge onto the rock-hard tarmac. Customer experience supervisor Olivia Hristovska, 51, fell down as she was peeking through viewing windows in the wall of an aerobridge. In May, a knifeman was shot dead at a top Brit holiday airport. The 18-year-old was shot five times at Gran Canaria Airport after going berserk and lunging at one of the officers who confronted him. Terrified holidaymakers were seen running for cover as shots rang out during the Saturday afternoon incident. Shocking footage shows the knifeman, today named as Abdoulie Bah, running at one of the five National Police officers trying to intercept him, with the cop falling to the ground as bystanders scramble to safety. He was shot as he tried to attack the officer's colleagues who appeared to be warning him to desist before they opened fire. He was pronounced dead at the scene.


The Guardian
30 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Gisèle Pelicot settles claim for invasion of privacy against French magazine
Gisèle Pelicot, who survived almost a decade of rape by dozens of men after she was drugged by her ex-husband, has settled an invasion of privacy case with the French magazine Paris Match. Pelicot, who became a feminist hero after she decided to waive her right to anonymity in the trial of her ex-husband and 50 other men last year, took legal action against Paris Match in April. The weekly magazine had published seven pictures of Pelicot accompanied by a man described as her companion walking in the streets in her new home town. At the time, Pelicot's lawyers said it was 'shocking' and 'disappointing' that Paris Match would secretly take pictures of Pelicot, who had been secretly filmed by her ex-husband during more than 200 rapes from 2011 to 2020. One of the lawyers, Antoine Camus, accused Paris Match of 'having learned nothing' from the four-month rape trial last year. Before a court hearing scheduled for Wednesday, lawyers for Pelicot and Paris Match confirmed that an agreement had been reached to settle the privacy case. At Pelicot's request, the magazine agreed to pay €40,000 to two charities that support victims of violence. The first, Isofaculté, is an equestrian centre based in Mazan, the village in the south of France where Pelicot lived at the time of the attacks on her. The equestrian centre supports vulnerable people, including women and children who are victims of violence. The second charity is WomenSafe & Children, a network of groups that support women and children survivors of violence and abuse. In a statement, lawyers said the case had been solved in a way that provides for 'the protection of other victims'. Pelicot, 73, a former logistics manager and grandmother of seven, had insisted that the rape trial in 2024 should be held in public to raise awareness of drug-induced abuse. 'It's not for us to have shame, it's for them,' she had said. Her ex-husband, Dominique Pelicot, one of the worst sex offenders in modern French history, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for drugging her and inviting dozens of men to rape her in her home in the south of France over a period of almost a decade of their marriage. A total of 50 other men were found guilty. The court heard that Dominique Pelicot, a retired electrician and former estate agent, had crushed sleeping tablets and anti-anxiety medication into his wife's mashed potato, coffee or ice-cream and invited dozens of men to rape her in the village of Mazan, Provence, where the couple had retired. Pelicot is to publish a memoir next year. She has said of the book: 'I now want to tell my story in my own words … to convey a message of strength and courage to all those who are subjected to difficult ordeals. May they never feel shame. And in time, may they even learn to savour life again and find peace.'


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Austria shooting LIVE: Girl, 15, named as first victim after ex-pupil, 21, killed 10 & sent mum ‘sick farewell vid'
A TEEN girl has been named as the first victim of the tragic mass shooting in Austria that left 11 people dead. Lea Bajrami, 15 was killed at the BORG Dreierschützengasse high school in what marked the country's worst shooting rampage in modern history. 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 Paying tributes to a young Lea, her aunt Muhabi posted a picture and wrote: "With a broken heart and great pain, we inform family, friends that our niece, Lea Ilir Bajrami tragically lost her life in the attack in Graz, Austria. "We pray for her soul and express our gratitude to all those who share our pain in these difficult times." Lea was one of the six girls to be killed alongside three boys and a woman. Another 11 are seriously injured and in hospital receiving treatment. A 21-year-old shooter, identified as Artur A., terrorised the high school in Graz before turning the gun on himself. The attacker also recorded a video for his mother talking about his imminent crime and saying he was acting "of his own free will", reports Heute. He even left a chilling suicide note at his residence in the wider Graz region. Friends speaking to local media suggested the shooting could be an act of revenge, and that he might have been looking for someone to blame after failing to pass the sixth form. In the suicide note, he reportedly revealed that he had felt "bullied". Horrifying video from the scene yesterday showed pupils hiding in a classroom as gunshots rang out nearby. Other clips showed students running for their lives as heavily armed cops made their way inside the BORG Dreierschützengasse high school. A dad told local media that one of his sons lay down on the floor and pretended to be dead to escape gunfire. The gunman was armed with two legally-owned weapons - a Glock pistol and a shotgun. The lone shooter was found dead in a bathroom after turning a gun on himself, the Austrian interior minister confirmed. He was not known to police, and a motive is yet to be officially confirmed. Senior government officials - including Chancellor Christian Stocker - yesterday attended a memorial in Graz Cathedral to mourn the loss of lives. The Austrian government has now declared a three-day mourning period. 10th Jun 2025, 13:29 By Sayan Bose 'This horror cannot be put into words' says Austrian president Alexander Van der Bellen said Austria was mourning today and called the shooting a "horror" that "cannot be put into words". He added: "What happened today in a school in Graz strikes at the heart of our country. "These were young people who had their whole lives ahead of them. "A teacher who accompanied them on their journey." By Sayan Bose Emergency services continue working at the scene 10th Jun 2025, 13:12 By Sayan Bose Shooter was 'bullied' in school Local media reports say the ex-pupil was a victim of bullying during his time at the school. 10th Jun 2025, 12:49 By Sayan Bose Austria's population among the most heavily armed in Europe Austria has one of the most heavily armed civilian populations in Europe, with an estimated 30 firearms per 100 persons, according to the Small Arms Survey, an independent research project. Machine guns and pump action guns are banned, while revolvers, pistols and semi-automatic weapons are allowed only with official authorization. Rifles and shotguns are permitted with a firearms license or a valid hunting licence, or for members of traditional shooting clubs. 10th Jun 2025, 12:47 By Sayan Bose Graz school shooting 'unbearable', says Austria's minister Austria's Minister for European and International Affairs Beate Meinl-Reisinger wrote on X: "It's incomprehensible and unbearable. "My sympathy and grief go out to the victims and their families. No one can imagine the suffering; as a mother of three children, it breaks my heart." 10th Jun 2025, 12:45 By Sayan Bose Cops say area has been secured A local police spokesman said the area had been secured, the school had been evacuated and relatives of the victims and pupils were being cared for. "There is no further danger for the population, but there are several dead," he told Austrian television. 10th Jun 2025, 12:16 By Sayan Bose Austrian chancellor calls Graz school shooting 'national tragedy' Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker said a shooting at a school in the city of Graz was a "national tragedy" in a statement on Tuesday and offered his condolences to the families who have lost their children. "The rampage at a school in Graz is a national tragedy that has deeply shaken our entire country," Stocker said. "There are no words for the pain and grief that we all - all of Austria - are feeling right now," he added. 10th Jun 2025, 12:00 By Sayan Bose In pictures: emergency services at the scene 10th Jun 2025, 11:39 By Sayan Bose Death toll rises to 10 At least 10 people are now believed to be dead after the shooting rampage in the Austrian school. Graz Mayor Elke Kahr confirmed the suspected shooter was among those killed. Another 28 people have been severely injured, with four currently in extremely critical condition.