
News of the Times - Unlocking the vaults of historical crime
Welcome to News of the Times!
Step into the shadowed alleyways and gaslit parlours of the 18th and 19th centuries with News of the Times — a meticulously curated journey through historical crime. Each episode draws from authentic reports and court records, bringing you the darkly fascinating tales that gripped Georgian, Victorian, and Edwardian Britain.
With over 500 episodes and counting, we explore true accounts of mischief, murder, and mayhem from days gone by — all delivered with a wry nod and a love for the curious corners of the past.
🕵️ For those with a taste for the peculiar, you may also enjoy our new side project: Volume 1: Slightly Unreliable Memoirs — a whimsical collection inspired by the lives (and occasional misadventures) of our research team. Think cravats, crumpets, and the occasional cactus on the lam. Intrigued? Find it here:
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News of the Times - Unlocking the vaults of historical crime
The Woman in the Water Tub: The 1915 Murder of Carrie Jubb
The Woman in the Water Tub: The 1915 Murder of Carrie Jubb
News of the Times | Episode 534 | 1915
At 6 a.m. on a cold February morning, a young stable hand in Huddersfield made a horrifying discovery: a woman’s body, bruised and bloodied, was found kneeling headfirst in a horse’s water tub. Her name was Carrie Jubb, a woman of no fixed abode, with a troubled past—and no one to sound the alarm when she didn’t return home.
Who killed her? And why?
In this chilling Edwardian true crime case, we examine a life lived on the margins—of class, of safety, and of society’s concern.
With abusive partners, jealous exes, and shifting witness statements, Carrie’s story is one of silent suffering and systemic failure. No one was ever brought to trial. And her killer likely walked free.
⚖️ From newspaper accounts and inquest records, we piece together the last known movements of Carrie Jubb—and the circumstantial case that nearly led to justice.
🕯️ Further Particulars Segment
After the main case, we turn to a Victorian horror of a different sort:
💀 The Dangers of Overthinking.
In our bonus tale from 1879, a young American woman’s death is blamed not on arsenic or foul play—but on astronomy, watercolours, and excessive learning.
Prepare for a tragic warning from the annals of pseudoscience: ladies, beware—too much education may be… fatal.
👤 Narrated by Robin Coles
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📚 Related cases from the archive:
•913: The Curious Case of The Liverpool Sack Murder | EP423
https://youtu.be/QZTHm9xkPrY
1919: The Mysterious Murder of Nellie Rault | EP465
https://youtu.be/kOX5mRlG_as
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