logo
She Vanished After Meeting Her Lover. A Stepmother's Dream Led to Her Body — and the Killer

She Vanished After Meeting Her Lover. A Stepmother's Dream Led to Her Body — and the Killer

Yahoo20-05-2025
Curators at Moyse's Hall Museum in Suffolk, England, found that a book on their office shelf was bound in the skin of William Corder, a 19th-century murderer
Maria Marten's remains were discovered nearly a year after she vanished, following a dream her stepmother had about her death
Corder confessed and was executed in front of a crowd of thousandsIt was a skin-crawling revelation.
Staff at a museum in Suffolk, England, recently learned that an unassuming old book sitting in their office was actually made from human skin — believed to be that of a 19th-century murderer who was hanged nearly 200 years ago.
The killer, William Corder, was convicted in 1828 of murdering a woman named Maria Marten in what became known as the Red Barn Murder. According to the BBC, the book was donated decades ago by a family member of the surgeon who anatomized Corder's body. Curators at Moyse's Hall Museum in Bury St. Edmunds realized what the book was — and how it was made — about a month ago. It's now on display.
Corder was from a middle-class family of farmers and lived in the village of Polstead when he met Marten when he was 22. The two subsequently became lovers, per the outlet.
In 1827 Corder came up with a plan for him and Marten to elope. He told her to meet him at the Red Barn on the Corders' farm so they could run away together. But Marten was never seen again.
Corder swiftly left Suffolk and wrote to the Marten family that he and Maria had eloped. In reality, he was hiding out just outside of London after shooting Maria in the neck and burying her at the Red Barn.
Almost a year later, Maria's stepmother, Ann Marten, had a dream that Maria was dead and at the Red Barn. Per the outlet, Maria's father dug with his 'mole spud' — a type of spade — and found Maria's remains at the barn.
A manhunt ensued for Corder. When authorities found him, he denied any knowledge of what had happened to Maria. But he had a letter in his possession informing him that her body had been found.
Corder was tried on 10 counts of murder, each based on a different theory on how Maria was killed, the BBC reported. Corder initially claimed Maria had died by suicide, but he was ultimately found guilty after a two-day trial, which included a confession in which Corder said he accidentally shot Maria during an argument.The BBC reported that an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 people came to see Corder hanged outside the prison on Aug. 11, 1828.
There are currently two books about the trial — both of which are bound with Corder's skin, the BBC reported. Popular Mechanics reports that the practice of binding books in human skin — known as anthropodermic bibliopegy — dates back to at least the 13th century. By the 19th century, some doctors were using the skin of their own dissected patients to bind medical texts.
According to The Times, Corder's skeleton remained at London's Hunterian Museum for more than 70 years — until it was released in 2004 following a campaign by a relative who had researched her family tree. Subsequently, Corder's remains were cremated.
Read the original article on People
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Teacher charged with killing of hikers at Arkansas park pleads not guilty to murder
Teacher charged with killing of hikers at Arkansas park pleads not guilty to murder

Associated Press

time10 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Teacher charged with killing of hikers at Arkansas park pleads not guilty to murder

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — The teacher who authorities say admitted to fatally stabbing two hikers at Devil's Den State Park in Arkansas last month pleaded not guilty Monday to murder charges. Andrew James McGann entered the plea during a brief hearing before a state judge at Washington County's jail Monday morning. Circuit Judge Joanna Taylor scheduled McGann's next hearing for Nov. 14. He's being held without bond. McGann has been charged with two counts of capital murder in the July 26 killing of Clinton David Brink, 43, and Cristen Amanda Brink, 41. The two were hiking with their daughters — ages 7 and 9 years old — and the girls were not injured in the attack. Authorities have not publicly identified a motive for the attack at Devil's Den, a 2,500-acre (1,000-hectare) state park about 140 miles (220 kilometers) northwest of Little Rock. McGann was arrested on July 30 at a barbershop in Springdale, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of the park. McGann had not yet started his new job at Springdale Public Schools and had previously worked in Texas and Oklahoma. Authorities have said he did not have a prior criminal record. State Police have said McGann admitted to the killings shortly after his arrest and that investigators matched his DNA to blood found at the crime scene.

An ‘Entitled' scandal: Here are the key takeaways from the scathing new Prince Andrew biography
An ‘Entitled' scandal: Here are the key takeaways from the scathing new Prince Andrew biography

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

An ‘Entitled' scandal: Here are the key takeaways from the scathing new Prince Andrew biography

Short-tempered, vain, arrogant, sex obsessed... Prince Andrew, Duke of York and the younger brother of King Charles III, does not come off well in Andrew Lownie's new book, 'Entitled: The Rise And Fall Of The House Of York.' To say the very least. The new biography, which tells the story of "a spoilt prince unable to connect and a duchess pushed by her insecurities into a desperate need to maintain the attention her 'royal' status brought," is based on court papers, freedom of information disclosures, interviews with ex-staffers and correspondence. The 450 pages reportedly took Lownie four years to complete, and he paints an unflattering portrait of the Duke of York – from shady financial deals to sex scandals and close ties with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Extracts from the book were serialised in the Daily Mail newspaper, and the biography hits shelves today. It comes as a YouGov poll suggests that not only is Prince Andrew is the most unpopular royal in the country, but also that two thirds of Britons would support stripping him of his remaining royal titles - Queen Elizabeth II having stripped her son of his military titles and patronages in 2022. 'Entitled: The Rise And Fall Of The House Of York' will do nothing to lower his polling numbers. Here are five of the key takeaways from this damning new book. Andrew and Epstein's relationship 'Entitled: The Rise And Fall Of The House Of York' dwells on the relationship between Andrew and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, saying that their bond was much closer than the prince has admitted. Lownie claims that Andrew 'was easy prey for a rattlesnake like Epstein,' adding: 'Epstein played Andrew. The prince was a useful idiot who gave him respectability, access to political leaders and business opportunities. He found him easy to exploit.' Lownie reports that Ivan Novikov, Epstein's personal driver, claims he remembers driving the prince around with 'two young girls around eighteen to the Gansevoort Hotel in the Meatpacking District. Both girls were doing lines of cocaine.' Lownie also alleges that Epstein sold Andrew's 'most intimate secrets' to foreign intelligence agencies around the world, including to Israel's Mossad and the Saudi Arabian authorities. Andrew claims to have met Epstein in 1999 – something the book refutes, as the pair allegedly already knew each other 'almost a decade earlier'. The late Virgina Giuffre, who was a masseuse in Epstein's employ, accused Andrew and Epstein of sexual assault. He denied any wrongdoing in the disastrous 2019 interview with BBC's Newsnight, in which Andrew claimed that he had no memory of meeting Giuffre - despite numerous photos of them together. Giuffre later filed a lawsuit against Andrew in 2021. They settled the following year outside of court for an undisclosed amount. Giuffre took her own life earlier this year, at the age of 41. An 'unbelievably cruel' man The book claims that Andrew once called a royal staff member a 'f*cking imbecile' for failing to give the Queen Mother her full title. 'He could be unbelievably cruel,' Lownie writes of Andrew's behaviour towards royal employees. Other cases of inappropriate and childish behaviour include firing an employee because he wore a nylon tie, dismissing another member of staff because he had a mole on his face, and asking his security guards to retrieve his golf balls. A tussle with Harry Lownie alleges that Prince Harry gave his uncle Andrew a bloody nose during a 'heated argument' at a 2013 family gathering in which 'punches were thrown'. The book claims that Harry 'got the better of Andrew' after the latter said that his marriage to 'opportunist' Meghan Markle would not last more than a month. Lownie also claims: 'Buckingham Palace braced itself for historic complaints about Prince Andrew's bullying, profanities and impossible demands. Some say a report on bullying accusations against Meghan Markle has never been released because it would also raise questions about the behaviour of the queen's second son.' This refers to the accusations of bullying levelled against Markle in 2021 – accusations which she has denied. The philandering prince Lownie alleges that Andrew, a 'sex addict,' had relations with anywhere from 'one thousand' to 'three thousand' women, including dozens he met through Epstein. Regarding his marriage with Sarah Ferguson, the book details how Andrew was in the Royal Navy when he and Ferguson wed in 1986, and most of his time was spent at sea. 'Sarah discovered Andrew wasn't coming home on some of his leave. He was going elsewhere - and this just drove her crazy,' shares the Duke of York's former driver in Lownie's book. The former employee also reveals that 'Randy Andy' slept with 'more than a dozen women' before Andrew and Ferguson's first anniversary. Other claims about Andrew's sex life include that he lost his virginity at 11 years old, that he 'realised he was obsessed with women', and that dozens of women were brought to his hotel room during a stay in Bangkok. 'Hotel staff were used to foreigners bringing in girls, but amazed that more than 10 a day were going to Andrew's room,' Lownie writes. Andrew and Sarah's schemes The book details Ferguson's money schemes, as well as how she met with an editor at Hello! magazine to discuss how she could fill the gap left by Princess Diana, following her death in 1997. She agreed 'to give Hello! everything about her for a monthly retainer,' a source told Lownie. 'The deal was thought to be worth $134,000 a month.' However, the spotlight is more on Andrew's grifting. From 2001 to 2011, he worked as the UK's Special Representative for International Trade and Investment and met leaders from Azerbaijan, Libya and Tunisia. He was reportedly not shy about asking for gifts and once allegedly demanded he be offered a Faberge egg. Lownie claims the late Queen Elizabeth II was well aware of Andrew's shady deals and the handouts, but that she was 'not going to do anything' as 'it seemed to be that if he wasn't caught and could get away with it,' then the palace would turn a blind eye. Throughout the book, Lownie doesn't just chronicle the downfall of a entitled and petty man, who hasn't been a "working royal" since 2019, but paints the portrait of the rot at the heart of Britain's royal family and how 'The Firm' favours a misguided sense of loyality over any accountability. "Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York" by Andrew Lownie, published by Harper Collins, is released on 14 August.

Latest update on Raven Hotel fire arson arrests
Latest update on Raven Hotel fire arson arrests

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Latest update on Raven Hotel fire arson arrests

TWO teenage girls remain on bail following their arrest for an alleged arson attack after a fire gutted the empty Raven Hotel. Both girls remain on bail and investigations are 'ongoing' following a fire which destroyed large parts of the Raven Hotel in Droitwich on Sunday. We have previously reported how the girls, aged 13 and 14, were arrested on suspicion of arson following the fire at the Raven Hotel in Droitwich. A spokesperson for West Mercia Police said in an earlier statement: "Police attended a large fire at the Raven Hotel on St Andrew's Street in Droitwich around 4.45pm on Sunday, August 10. "It's believed the fire may have been started deliberately, but thankfully nobody was injured."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store