Evelyn Foster

Evelyn Foster (1902 - 6 January 1931) was a British murder victim in Northumberland. The case remains officially unsolved.

Murder

Evelyn Foster was the daughter of an Otterburn, Northumberland garage proprietor, and worked as a self-employed taxidriver.[1] A former teacher and a member of a choir, she was popular in her community.[2] She was found with serious burns on 6 January 1931 on moorland outside Otterburn.[3]

Foster died a few hours after sustaining her injuries.[4] Before she died the victim described how she had picked up an unknown male passenger at Elishaw, who had asked to be taken to Ponteland.[4] She described how he had knocked her unconscious, thrown a rug over her, and set her on fire.[1]

Foster described her attacker as a Tyneside man, about 5ft 6in tall and around 25 or 26 years old.[1] He was clean-shaven and wore a dark tweed suit, a bowler hat and an overcoat.[1]

Investigation

Police confirmed that they were treating the investigation as a murder case, and that they were searching for a probable "sex-maniac".[5][6]

A man's scarf and glove were discovered at the scene.[7]

The father of Evelyn Foster wrote a letter to the Home Secretary which severely criticised the police investigation.[8] He argued that the car was left unprotected for hours, so that valid fingerprint samples could not be taken, and that police did not check footprints around the scene of the incident.[8]

The investigation is still an open case for Northumbria Police.[3]

Possible suspect

In 1933, Ernest Brown, 31, was sentenced to hang for the murder of his boss, Frederick Morton. The crime took place near Tadcaster, Yorkshire. Ernest is said to have uttered the word 'Otterburn' shortly before he was hanged and it's been suggested that this was his confession to Evelyn's murder. Ernest reportedly matched the description of the man who Evelyn described.[9] Author Robert Dixon examined Evelyn Foster's death in his 2011 book Evelyn Foster: Murder Or Fraud On The Northumberland Moors.[10]

Author Diane Janes was allowed full access to the Northumbria Police archives for the case in 2017.[11] In her book Death at Wolf's Nick: The Killing of Evelyn Foster she names a possible suspect.[11]

Aftermath

The family were devastated by the loss of Evelyn. Her sister later said, "We were just young then, but that night made us old. We've turned it over and over in our minds ever since. We were such a close family. The hurt was terrible."[12]

gollark: Yes.
gollark: > if social systems operated sanely and competent people ran things.
gollark: Mass deployment of nuclear power (and more funding for fusion research, which apparently has not received much), elimination of coal power plants, intra-city short-range electric carpools, sort of thing.
gollark: We probably could have fixed the entire climate issue ages ago if social systems operated sanely and competent people ran things.
gollark: The incentives are not in favour of this.

References

  1. Hutchinson, Lisa (5 January 2019). "The horrifying 1930s murder of a taxi driver which has left detectives baffled". Chronicle. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  2. "Moorland Hunt for Car Murderer". The Daily Telegraph (23602). 8 January 1931.
  3. "Evelyn Foster: The unsolved murder of a Northumberland taxi driver". BBC News. BBC. 5 January 2019. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  4. "Otterburn Car Mystery". The Times (45738). 4 February 1931.
  5. "Lonely Moor Crime". The Daily Telegraph (23619). 28 January 1931.
  6. "New Clues to Car Murder". The Daily Telegraph (23603). 9 January 1931.
  7. "Woman Motorist Murdered". The Times (45715). 8 January 1931.
  8. "The Murder Of Evelyn Foster". The Times (45743). 10 February 1931.
  9. "Chronicle Crime Files: Northumberland Moors murder mystery of Evelyn Foster's death". ChronicleLive. 28 January 2015. Retrieved 6 December 2019.
  10. Dixon, Robert (2011). Evelyn Foster: Murder Or Fraud On The Northumberland Moors. Robert Dixon. ISBN 9781466461451.
  11. Diane Janes (May 2017). Death at Wolf's Nick: The Killing of Evelyn Foster. Mirror Books. ISBN 978-1-907324-67-3.
  12. Garratt, Rex (4 January 1991). "Was She Murdered?". Newcastle Evening Chronicle.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.