Morbid - Episode 501: The Stanfield Hall Murders
Episode Date: October 9, 2023On November 28, 1848, Isaac Jermy and his son were shot and killed in their Wymondham estate, Stanfield Hall. After a brief search, investigators located the killer, James Blomfield Rush, a t...enant farmer who was leasing land from Jermy and had fallen behind on his payments. Fearing eviction and destitution, Rush concocted a plan to kill the entire Jermy family and their staff, then cast blame on Jermy’s relatives, with whom the family had been feuding over the title of the estate. However, the plan fell apart when several of the victims survived and identified Rush as the killer.Thank you to the lovely David White, of Bring Me the Ax podcast, for research assistance.ReferencesBayne, A.D. 1849. The Stanfield Tragedy: A Complete Narrative. Norwich, England: Jarold and Sons.Bristol Mercury. 1849. "Rush's trial." Bristol Mercury, April 7: 2.Caledonian Mercury. 1849. "Execution of Rush." Caledonia Mercury, April 23.Liverpool Mercury. 1848. "Horrible murders in Norfolk." Liverpool Mercury, December 5: 2.Royal College of Physicians of London. 1850. A Full Report of the Trial of James Blomfield Rush for theMurder of Mr. Jermy and His Son. London, England: W.M. Clark.The Times. 1848. "Horrible murders at Stanfield Hall, near Wymondham." The Times, December 01: 5.—. 1848. "The murders at Stanfield Hall." The Times, December 4: 3.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hey, Weirdos, I'm Ash.
And I'm Alina.
And this is morbid. But you know what's a not more, Ben?
What?
We have a forreking coffee that is launching and like realistically what goes better together
than true crime and coffee time?
Truly, truly, you know how much we love coffee
and we get to introduce the first morbid coffee
with Dead Sled Coffee!
The absolute most perfect and badass club out there.
I have been loving Dead Sled for literal years at this point.
I've been a fan girlie of Dead Sled Coffee in OG.
They've collabed with some of my favorite people like El Vira.
They have Rob Zombie coffee.
Like they're, I'm losing my mind at this collaboration.
Well guys, now they have us because in honor of National Coffee Day,
we are launching not just one, but two morbid
brews just for you weirdos.
One is just for me.
And the other is just for Elena.
Elena's is really exciting.
It's got like luxurious black packaging and it's called Elena's death brew.
Hell yeah.
It is a blend so strong, it will actually wake the dead.
And I think we're kind of hoping that you savor this dark rock. Roast.
Roast.
We're kind of hoping that you savor this dark roast, though, so you can enjoy the
notes of Tara Masou as you energize your inner creativity. Hell yeah.
I'm so excited about my packaging. I can't wait for you to see it. I'm even more
excited possibly because Ash's packaging is ash,
to a tea.
It is literally spellbinding pink packaging.
Pink!
And it's called Ash's Witches Brew, which is made for all lavender and honey in it. Very ash.
And it's the perfect blend to harness the power
of your fucking higher self.
And not only this, so that we have this coffee coming out,
the two different ones, you can also get one of the new
zodiac mugs out of our zodiac mug collection
that we're launching.
It's gonna go along with your coffee blend of choice.
Because we said we can't just give them coffee,
we have to give them something to put the coffee in.
Hell yeah.
So you get to choose between zodiac mugs
that channel either your inner Elena
with a dark goth vibe,
or you can channel your inner me-ash
and those mugs have a bright and groovy vibe.
And more exciting, you can also personalize
your star sign on your mug with your name or for like a fellow weirdo
that you love.
Where are my fellow capies out there?
Geminius.
And what's exciting too is this is also gonna come
with a coffee tray that can hold all your coffee,
a couture mumps, all your essentials,
and it comes in two different styles.
Hell yeah.
One's Ashi and one's Alena.
Yeah.
This is the most exciting thing ever.
Oh, I actually, I'm not even joking.
You are so gray outside right now
that I need a cup of our coffee
and we brewed Alena's roast this morning.
Yeah, get the gray away.
Oh, seriously, so gray.
It's morbid and it's rainy.
Rainy, rainy, rainy.
It's very gray out.
It is very gray out.
It's very gray in, too.
It's gray in, it's gray out.
I feel gray.
Gray all around.
Gray all day.
Gray all for good night.
But you know what, we're bringing it.
Oh yeah.
We may be feeling gray right now,
but we're bringing it.
Bringing it right to ya.
We're bringing it,
we're bringing you some gray old,
tiny, shenanigans.
It's funny whenever you tell an old-timey story
in my head I see it in black and white.
So it is gray.
I love that.
So it is.
It's a gray scale.
Yeah.
You know what this is?
Brought to you by Gray.
We said that word so many times.
I think it just lost all meaning.
But yeah, today's gonna be an old timey one.
It's an interesting one
because it's just got so many old timey elements to it.
Like it's got heirs and estates and land owning
and I just slay my head into land owning.
Land owning, so old timey.
Wait, I think the writer's strike just ended.
Oh shit, that's what somebody just texted us.
So someone just texted us. Someone just texted us.
It's true, they had come to a tentative agreement.
So it's still tentative.
Well, everybody's got to sign off on it.
But hey, oh, sounds good.
Okay, let's go, brothers. Sorry, I knew you were looking forward to the rest.
Let's go, brothers. I was. Thank you.
That is exciting. Let's hope that it all continues going in the right direction.
There you go.
You know, because then it's the actors next.
They got to get on board.
Oh gosh.
But that's exciting.
I know.
We love to hear it.
And this case is called the Stanfield Hall murders.
Ooh.
And it's very, it's in England, it's, it's very, like if I want you
to look up Stanfield Hall. Okay. And if you look up Stanfield Hall murders, you will get
a picture of the, the place that this happened as it looks today. Okay. It is the most gorgeous
estate I have ever seen.
So that's why people were finding over it.
And I'm pretty sure it sold recently for like 5.25 million.
Or it was on sale for 5.25 million.
Is it this?
Yes, it's gorgeous.
I love a building covered in greenery and loss and ivy.
Give me an ivy covered stone building with a boat around it
and signed me the fuck up.
I love that you said there has to be a boat.
There has to be a boat around it.
This place has a boat.
Look at that, fucking the floor.
It's gorgeous.
Oh my God.
So this happened so on November 28th, 1848,
a guy named Isaac Jeremy and his son
found themselves under attack at their Windmendham
state, Stanfield Hall in England.
I think it was Norwich where it was.
What led to their murders was a long feud that, like I said, involved estates, rightful
heirs, and angry lanternets.
So the worst of the worst.
A lot of messiness involved here.
So and the guy that did it that was convicted of doing it and at the end will obviously
tell you who he had a lot of stuff go on in his life that you're like, this is a lot
of coincidences around you.
That when you look back on it, you're like, huh, oh, coincidences.
Coincidences.
Air bunnies, air bunnies, quote unquote.
Yikes.
So let's get into it.
Well, first let's talk about the Jeremy family, because these are the victims, these are
the ones that only state at the time.
Okay.
So born Isaac Preston on September 23rd, 1789, Isaac Jeremy had resided at the families
of state, which is Stanford Hall, for pretty much all of his life.
Wow.
There were some years in between where he spent some time training at Westminster School
to become a lawyer.
But other than that, it was Stan Field Hall or Bust.
He was living there.
I feel that.
But after he graduated from Westminster and he got admitted to the bar, bully for him, that's
pretty great.
He practiced law and Norwich.
And after this, he ended up taking a seat
on the Norfolk Circuit Court
and then became appointed as recorder of Norwich in 1838,
which was a pretty good position
and he held it until his death.
He's a big deal.
Yeah.
Now when his father Reverend George Preston
died in 1837, Isaac inherited the family estate, which included Stanfield
Hall.
Because he's the eldest boy.
I'm the eldest boy.
And it was then that he took the name, and this is where it gets a little like, you're
like, what the fuck's happening right now?
Because old time, he shit gets weird.
It does.
When he inherited this estate in Stanfield Hall. He took the name of his ancestor, William Jeremy, which was necessary for him to take ownership
of the family estate.
You got to change your whole ass name if you get like land transferred to you.
So instead of being oppressed in, he now had to be a Jeremy.
Because the Jeremy's owned the estate.
Yeah.
So it's like that.
It was like necessary by law.
Weird. And so he also had to take on the Jeremy
code of arms for it to become legally his.
I kind of like the tradition of it all. It's kind of fun.
Yeah. I mean, it was so complicated and fun. I love it.
It would suck if you're like what like 30 and then all of a sudden your name's William
and it used to be Isaac. Yeah. I mean, it's can get weird.
But well, I mean, well, he could keep Isaac, but he had to be Isaac. Like that might be a big concern. I mean, it's gonna get weird. Well, I mean, well, he could keep Isaac,
but he had to be Isaac Jeremy now.
Oh, can.
So now maybe I wasn't clear about that,
but he, yeah, Isaac Preston became Isaac Jeremy.
So it's like you're marrying the house.
I was just gonna say, so it's like,
yeah, you're taking someone else's name.
You're taking the house's name.
Yeah, okay.
I'm like that, you know,
Stanfield Hall should, it deserves that.
You know, I would marry that place.
Why not?
So he became Jeremy.
He has the Jeremy Kodavarms.
And at the time of his death,
he lived in the house with his son, Isaac Jeremy Jr.
Oh my God.
I know.
He also lived with Isaac Jeremy Jr's wife
who was pregnant at the time of the murders
and several domestic
workers who lived on the estate.
So this guy lives with his son and his daughter-in-law.
Exactly.
Okay.
And like a bunch of people who worked in this.
Sure.
Now, following the death of Reverend George Preston, so this dad, exactly, in 1837, Thomas
Jeremy and his cousin John Larner, part of the fam, both members of, but not direct
heirs of the Jeremy family.
They were like, wait a second.
No, no, no.
Why is Isaac Preston now Jeremy getting this entire shit?
Why is he taking possession of the estate?
I want to claim it for me.
I'm a Jeremy, but you're not, you're not, but he's taking possession of the estate. I want to claim it for me. I'm a Jeremy.
But you're not, you're not the...
But he's not a Jeremy.
Yeah.
That's a very like fuck.
That's something simple to me.
Right.
They want to try to take it,
claim it for themselves.
And I say nice try, Deutersons,
but it's not gonna happen.
The bloodline just doesn't work that way.
Exactly.
I'm the other spot.
And Thomas said, me too, but of a different family.
And then Jeremy said, he said, no, it's mine now.
I have the code of arms.
He said, you may be Ann, eldest boy, but I'm the eldest boy.
That's a succession thing referenced by the way, in case you're like, why are you screaming
that?
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So when they tried to convince the courts
that they were the rightful heirs,
meaning Thomas Jeremy and his cousin John Larner.
That was in September 1838.
The courts were like, no.
No, you're not.
Yeah.
So not one to sit down and listen to logic.
Thomas Jeremy gathered a group of laborers
and attempted to take the estate by force.
Oh my God, like Gaston and Beauty and the Beatrice.
Yeah, he tried to storm the castle.
It gets mine, it's so true.
They brought a big old tree lump with them.
Yeah, they did.
They jumped, I mean, a tree lump.
I'm gonna just say stump.
I told you, I told you I was gray inside.
A tree lump and stump.
All right, men, we have our tree lump, let's go.
Get your torches and your tree lumps in them. All right, men, we have our tree lump. Let's go
Get your torches and your tree lumps
Yeah, he gasped on it and everybody had torches and shit
But they were turned away by a name a man by a name
A name a name came strolling out and was like, no, no. I'm sure you had a name.
He did.
He was having a name.
He was having a rush.
He served as Isaac Jeremy's bailiff at the time, and he came out and was like, no, no,
no.
Because Isaac Jeremy said bailiff.
bailiff.
Just like Judge Judith Shindler.
That's exactly.
She calls the bailiff.
I'm sure it was just like that.
That's similar.
But Thomas, so they got turned away.
James Rush was like, I don't think so.
He said, get on out of here.
And Thomas Jeremy was actually brought to trial,
but was ultimately acquitted for this whole thing.
But still was not satisfied, even though he got acquitted.
He got away with almost taking that estate by force.
Yeah, is that like conspiracy to commit burglary?
Yeah, or not even burglary, just like conspiracy
to commit home invasion?
Yeah.
Like grand larceny of house.
Of home?
Of estate.
But like conspiracy because he didn't ever get there
because he just didn't get there.
He just planned to just said to take your tea tree lump
and go home.
And then the bailiff said nah. But he there. Just planned that. You said to take your treat, treat lump and go home.
And then the bailiff said nah.
But he wasn't satisfied with that.
So he returned to, after getting acquitted,
getting away with it, like take your lumps and leave.
He returned to Stanfield Hall in September 24th.
And this time you brought a much larger group with him.
And a bigger treat lump.
And they've, in a bigger treat lump.
Like, and they broke into the mansion with crow and a bigger tree. And they've in a bigger tree. And they broke into the mansion
with crowbars. Oh shit. And once inside, they forced all the workers to flee the house and
barricaded themselves inside. Damn. So they took over this house and we're like, this is mine now.
Now, rather than try to convince them to come out, like coax them out. Isaac Jeremy called for military assistance,
and they were forcibly taken out of the house
by military assistance.
This is insane.
Yeah.
And they were put on trial.
What the fuck?
Eventually, they all pleaded guilty
to minor offenses of rioting,
which is a minor offense in comparison
to what they could have gotten.
Because Thomas Jeremy and John Larner each only served three months for the offense against
Isaac Jeremy and the laborers that they assembled for the purpose of breaking into this house,
they got even lighter sentences.
In Isaac Jeremy was in like, like I said, he was the recorder for Norwich, so he was in
a pretty big position in the county.
He was the county recorder and he could have easily pursued very tough sentences against these,
especially Thomas and John. Right. The ring leaders.
Cause they'd seized his home like that. He could have fucked them up after trying multiple times.
He had all the right to and he had all the power to, but he chose not to.
It's family.
And even with that, even with Isaac being like,
I'm gonna let you just serve a little bit of a sentence
and hopefully that kind of knocks some sense into you.
Still the animosity over the incident got really bad.
Uh-oh.
And there was still the continued belief
that Isaac Jeremy wasn't the rightful heir.
So it created a huge rift between the families
that continued until Isaac's death in 1848.
Wow.
So during the first attempted takeover
of the Stanfield estate, James Rush,
who I talked about before the bailiff,
his name is James Bloomfield Rush.
He actually played like a huge role in stopping the men
from trying to take over the house.
Like that was him who stopped that.
But even though he was still in employment
with Isaac Jeremy at the time that this all ended,
like when Thomas and John were sentenced to three months
and all that, the relationship between them
had kind of soured.
It had become a little complicated by this time.
So even though he was a huge role in stopping
that whole thing in the first place,
things were not going as smoothly as they could.
Uh-oh.
He was born in 1809 to Mary Bloomfield
and he was the product of a rather illicit affair between Mary and a
gentleman farmer in Windmanham. And that affair ended pretty quickly when he was like two
years old. And when it came to an end, she actually married sued this man for breach of
promise and was awarded a lot of, like a good amount of money by the courts
because he was supposed to marry her. Right. But she used that money to care for her son.
And James never really ended up knowing who his father was. He didn't want anything to do with him.
What a sad, like sad start. Yeah. So she ended up luckily marrying
ended up meeting another man. James Bloom, James Rush. And he was like, you know what, I like this little kid, I want
to marry you. So she convinced him like, you know, this can be your father. Okay. This is your
father figure now. And Mr. Rush, I'll call him Mr. Rush just to make it easier because James Rush.
Yeah. So the father, Mr. Rush, he basically treated him as his own child and even amended his name to include his surname.
Wow.
Because remember, he was James Bloomfield before this,
but now he's James Bloomfield-Rush.
Gotcha, gotcha.
So his parents got married, his stepfather and his mom got married,
and James and his mother moved in with Mr. Rush,
who was a tenant of Reverend George Preston,
who was Isaac Jeremy's father.
Okay, yeah, I know.
No, you're doing a good job
because I would be so confused right now.
I'm glad that it's making sense.
And Reverend George Preston had given them this home
which they could rent.
It was like a modest house adjacent to the
Stanfield Hall of State.
Oh, they look at guest house kind of.
Yeah, it was kind of like that whole thing.
So, again, Mr. Rush, the stepfather,
he didn't have any children of his own
at the time that he married Mary.
Right.
So he really did treat James as his own son.
He sent him to the best school in the area.
And upon completing schooling, James Jr. there,
returned to Norwich in 1828 and he got married.
Nice.
After this, he began working as a tenant farmer
for W.E.L. Bolwer at Dawingwood Farms.
But Rush thought that farming was gonna be a little easier
than it actually was.
I don't know what gave him that idea
because farming to me looks really hard.
Sounds like a lot of hard work.
And within a year, he was losing money on his farm.
And in an attempt to get back some of these losses,
he actually ended up setting fire
to a bunch of stacks of wheat
and submitted an insurance claim
saying that they had caught fire by accident.
That's fake as fuck.
And there were definitely rumors everywhere
in gossip that he had definitely set that fire.
And even rumors that he was gonna be arrested for arson.
But there was no proof of him being the arsonist.
So the company did pay out the claim.
All probably like sober grudgingly.
Yeah, and it definitely gave him a false sense of confidence.
Like, oh, I got away with it.
So a few years later in 1830,
while still living under
that tendency agreement with Bulwer,
what the farm where he was living, James again
found that he was losing money.
He was struggling financially.
But this time, he started blaming outside sources,
not like his inability to farm.
Now he was blaming the competition, other farmers,
for his inability to make a
profit.
It was all their fault.
That's not that he couldn't do it.
And so he decided, you know what?
Instead of working harder or trying something else that I might be better at, I'm just
going to turn to more felonious behavior.
So he assembled a mob of laborers, which seems like something that a lot of people enjoyed
doing back then, I guess.
Yeah. You get mad and you just assemble laborers.
Call up some laborers.
And he led them to a farm in nearby Fulsham,
where once they got there, they destroyed
a ton of pieces of huge farm equipment,
and then they all ran in opposite directions.
So they fucked up all the farm equipment
and then left, basically trying to make it so this farm
would get, wouldn't be able to function.
Yeah.
So he was trying to fuck up the competition
instead of just doing better himself.
That's not a good way to win.
He did end up, Rush was arrested a short time later,
and he was tried, especially for leading the mob,
but no verdict was ever returned.
And he was released into his own recognizance
to keep the peace.
What?
So it's just like, hang on, just leave.
They're like, don't do that.
Yeah, I was going to fuck around.
So it's like, cool.
This guy just keeps getting away with this shit.
Damn.
Now, his tendency agreement with Bollware came to an end in 1835, probably to everyone's
like, few.
And that's when he entered into a new tenancy agreement with Reverend George Preston, Isaac Jeremy's father.
Okay.
He had known at him as a child,
because remember, he had grown up on that property
with his stepfather and his mom.
So he knew this man, he knew the Preston family,
knew all of them.
And so they were like, yep,
we'll give you a tenancy agreement to live on our property.
So with this new agreement, he was allotted a parcel of farmland and a home.
And that was in exchange for a fee of 110 pounds per year,
and a percentage of the profits from farming for a period of 18 years.
So he would have to pay, rent, would also have to give a give a percentage
of whatever he got from his crops for 18 years.
Damn. That's a shitty agreement. I guess it was kind of this is another little like side
now because it's weird that I'm doing this one right now because this makes weird sense to me now.
I'm reading slew foot by Brahm. It's a really good book. You guys should read it.
Check it out.
I think I posted it on my stories,
but I'll post it again.
In that, it's from the 16th or 1700s.
Yeah.
They have a similar agreement of like,
I'll ten out this farmland to you.
You have to pay me rent and also give me a percentage
of the profits for like 10 years.
Okay.
And that's part of the story in Slu-Foot.
So hearing this now, I'm like, this is weird that this is 10 years. Okay. And that's part of the story in slew foot. So, and so hearing this now,
like this is weird that this is coming back.
Yeah, that's, that's always weird when that happens
when you find out like random information
and then it applies like somewhere else in your life.
Yeah, I didn't mean for that to line up like that.
But it's a simulation.
So, you know, he's got, he's got a deal.
He's living on there.
He's got his own farm.
He's just got to share some of it.
So, what he did was he also entered into a second He's living on there. He's got his own farm. He's just got to share some of it.
So what he did was he also entered into a second tendency agreement for his father-in-law
under the same conditions.
But this time, he was gonna be paying 130 pounds per year.
So he's under a tendency agreement
with Reverend George Preston,
and he's under a tenets agreement
for another farm for his father-in-law.
Okay. So he's paying out, but he's under a tenants agreement for like another farm for his father in law. Okay.
So he's paying out, but he's making money.
It's one of those things that used to happen
very often back then.
And the next year, he actually entered into a third
agreement for tenancy with Preston, again,
for another farm on the Stanfield Hall estate
with similar conditions.
But this one was at 500 pounds per year.
Oh, wow.
And at that same time, he entered,
he accepted a position as Reverend Preston steward
and advisor in all matters of business.
Wow.
So now he's under three tenant agreements.
He's got a place on the Preston estate.
He's paying out this money to three different,
well, Preston he's given two different rents to,
and then he's paying off his father-in-law,
but he's also got this new position now,
advising Reverend Preston.
So he's like, he's getting there, he's doing good.
Seems like it's gonna be like, all right, let's go.
Right.
And you know what, for Rush,
this whole thing was good.
In life and working with George Preston was good,
but when he died in 1837,
and possession of the family estate passed to Isaac.
Preston, now Jeremy.
And it ended up being discovered
that the three tendency agreements
that he had actually entered into
had actually been illegally executed.
Oh.
So is that like a get out of jail free card?
So that's not good for any, it's like his land is technically like.
Oh, yeah.
So although Isaac did keep rush on as his steward once his father had died, he rescinded the
illegal tendency agreements and issued new leases for the three properties.
Okay.
But he issued these leases at slightly higher rates from the other.
Oh, it's a different time.
Am I doing inflation?
That's a little legal one.
So it sounds like Reverend George Preston was like kind of doing him a little bit of a
solid.
Yeah.
And Isaac was like, I'm going to run things a little different here.
Yeah.
And at least he was like, I'll give you new ones.
Like for the right price.
Now despite the increased fees being more or less comparable to the rates of the day,
the increase was the first issue in their relationship.
The first issue in a series of events that would eventually lead to Isaac Jeremy being murdered.
Oh.
So several years later in late 1843,
Isaac got his eye on a potash farm.
I think it's how you say it, potash.
Okay.
That abutted the land on the place
where Stanfield Hall was sitting.
Okay.
And he directed Rush, his steward,
to go assess the land's value
and to make an offer of purchase to the seller. So you guys go get that land for me.
And what Jeremy didn't know was that Rush also had an interest in the land
and hope to get it for himself.
So Rush valued the property at 3,500 pounds.
And at Isaac Jeremy's behest, he made a bid on the man's behalf for $3,500. But immediately
after that rush went back and submitted his own bid on the property for $3,750, outbidding
Isaac Jeremy and taking the property for himself.
And was he just going to wave from his, like, to his employer from the land?
That's the thing.
He just bought, stole out from under him.
Yeah, like, what the fuck?
What's your plan there, dude?
And Isaac Jeremy was pissed.
He was not pleased by this,
because he was like, you're duplicitous.
What the fuck?
Yeah.
But even then, he agreed to lend the man the money
to purchase the land.
He was like, well, you outbid me.
But I have to give you the money.
Yeah.
That doesn't even make any sense.
Exactly.
Because he's like under his tendency.
And so he was like, all right, sure.
And he wrote up a new agreement for the amount of 5,000 pounds.
And under the terms of the new agreement, the sale was charged to the Jeremy estate
and mortgage to rush at 4% interest per year.
Ooh, which was roughly, I think, around like 200 pounds.
And this was with the understanding
that the mortgage would be paid off
as of November 30th, 1848.
So I think by now you can see it's getting messy. Yeah. This is messy business. We're intertwining a
lot of things. There's a lot of faiths being placed on people's, you know, honesty and in which
they have none other of which it doesn't look like there's a ton going around. And also,
and here's where the side note comes in about James Rush.
He owned, he ended up owning Miss Land along with his stepfather, Mr. Rush.
Okay. And on October 24th, 1844, they, the two of them, Mr. Rush and his son, James Bloomfield,
Rush, they went out hunting together alone. And when they returned alone,
Rush Sr. was in the kitchen of this property,
admiring Rush Jr.'s new shotgun,
when it accidentally went off.
They were alone.
Oh!
Rush Sr. was killed by this when they were alone,
when they were alone.
And he was just admiring the shotgun.
Yep.
And he just boom.
They had a wonderful hunting trip before that together.
Yep.
Huh.
Yeah.
And one would look at this and maybe say,
Suss, were you looking to get money from his estate?
Well, unfortunately for him, Rush Senior had left his estate to his wife Mary.
Well, yeah, James's mom. Uh-oh. So he didn't get any financial payout for that death.
Not that I'm saying that he wanted it. No. Because we don't know. It's strange that they were alone
and this happened and the only person to be able to tell. This story is James Rush, who was in need of financial compensation.
A little troublesome.
But you know, whatever he didn't get paid no matter what.
So it didn't mean anything.
So now in 18, they'll be more of that, by the way.
So now in 1844, this meant that Rush now owned three farms
with tendency agreements held by Isaac Jeremy.
And in the years that followed,
Rush borrowed more money to renovate
and expand his farming operation.
So he was under a lot of debt.
And by October 1847,
he'd fallen very behind on his payments to Jeremy
and was eventually served eviction papers
from the property on the Stanfield Hall of State.
And at this point, he went to live. and was eventually served eviction papers from the property on the standfield hall estate.
And at this point, he went to live. So that property on the standfield hall estate, he got evicted from. Okay. And he ended up moving to live on the potash farm. Okay. Or Potash. I don't
know if it's Potash or Potash. Somebody's gonna yell at me. I like Potash. I like Potash. It just
feels right. Or Potash. Potash. No, Potash. It just feels right or potash. Tash.
No, potash.
Potash seems like you're spending, you're like potash.
Yeah.
You know, like, but two.
But either way, not a farm.
A few months later, when Rush still didn't pay Jeremy, after he moved to that other farm,
Isaac filed suit for breach of covenants, and the case went to trial in March 1848.
So now he's suing him for not paying him.
Good.
The same year, James Rush's mother died, Mary.
I knew that was coming.
And it was said that John,
or that James was incredibly attentive to her
in her final days.
Uh huh.
And servants in the home were quoted as saying
that they witnessed him serving her soaked breads
by hand right before she passed away, soaked in water.
So I don't know, I don't know what happened there.
She died,. Parents die.
It's one of those sad things at that point.
But what's strange about this one is like,
his stepfather has died under a strange
and tragic circumstance.
Not long after.
And he said, that money's mine, right?
And they said, nope, it's your mom's.
And he said, oh, then his mom died
under tragic circumstances with him being by her side
in her last moments.
And then he says, that money's mine, right?
And they say, no.
She left it to her grandchildren.
Oh, shit.
I wonder why she didn't leave it to him.
That's a little sauce.
That's the other piece of this puzzle is,
like, what was your problem?
How come no one left you money? Like, how come? Yeah.
And so, you know, being not a man to sit down and let things just play out the way that
they're supposed to, he forged her signature and did an amendment on the documents to
make him in control of her money.
And if that doesn't tell you a little bit about what possibly happened, I don't know what
does.
Oh no, no, no, no, no.
Seems a little suspicious.
Just a little suspicious, you know?
I don't know.
I wasn't there.
Maybe this is all, maybe he's just being followed
by very ghastly coincidences.
But I don't know.
Take what you will from it.
He ended up getting control of the money.
And yeah, meanwhile, as that's happening,
the eviction and the lawsuit with Isaac Jeremy
is only worsening their relationship. It had already been crumbling and it's getting worse at
this point. Right. In a few weeks after the trial, James Rush actually published and distributed
a pamphlet that claimed to present a fair and accurate representation of the trial.
Okay.
Yeah, it's very Hamilton.
How could that be fair and accurate when one of the parties involved is writing it?
Thank you.
And in it, Rush claimed that he only took on the tenant farming leases with the Jeremy
family just to improve his financial situation for his family.
Okay.
And he said, quote, and this is no reason why I should be ruined
in character by this villain,
as well as my property being swallowed up by him.
And apparently showing evidence of Jeremy's villainery,
he put forth the false claim that Isaac Jeremy
had no right to the property in the first place.
Oh, so he decided to jump on that bandwagon.
And John Larner and Thomas Jeremy bandwagon and say, he's not the rightful air.
Even though I stopped them from doing whatever they were planning.
I may have put, you know, completely backed him when it benefited me, but now that it doesn't,
he's not the rightful air.
That's fake.
He said, this fellow Jeremy has no right
to this stand-field property.
He knows it and he knows I know it as well.
His whole conduct and keeping possession
and taking the name of Jeremy
and his behavior to those poor people
who have a right to it,
those poor people who he chased out of the house
when they were trying to take it over,
has been most villainous
and disgraceful to any man, any man who have any
pretension to respectability, and which I should be most happy to prove when called on to
do so.
If there's any truth in the Bible, such villainy is sure to be overtaken, and that when
it may be at least expected.
So he's saying, if there's any truth to the Bible,
then that place is gonna be taken back
by the rightful owners.
And it's like, I don't know, that sounds aggressive.
Why are you bringing the Bible into that?
That doesn't, I don't know about that.
Are you sure about that?
So he had a full plan that he is setting into motion,
that he's like, okay, you wanna fuck with me
because I didn't pay you what you are rightfully owed.
That's what I love.
He's like, oh, what?
You want to be paid?
Right.
What you are rightfully owed, sir?
How dare you?
No, no.
You're gonna bring me to court to get money that I owe you?
Huh?
No, I'm gonna fuck with you.
And he's like, I'm gonna destroy your reputation.
And it became even clearer when they found a letter he had sent to his own son in April,
just after the pamphlet had been published.
And in that letter, he said, I have at last got Jeremy in a fix.
And the Rouge in the Rouge in villain knows it well.
How he will act now will soon be seen.
At all events, he now knows if he ruins me, I can him or you
would not or you would not have seen him as you have. But I do not want anyone know this
except for your wife and her aunt. So he's basically being like, I've put it out there.
He knows now you fuck with me. I fuck with you harder. Yeah. And he's saying like basically
he knows I can ruin him no matter what, even if he's correct
in what he's asserting.
And he's like, I don't want anyone to know that I'm pulling this shit.
Okay.
And it's just like, you're just outing yourself all over the place.
That's the thing.
I'm like, you don't want anyone to know this, but sounds like real no.
A big old case of the dumb.
But over the summer and into the fall of 1848, Rush got to Schemen and Schemen and Schemen.
And all he wanted to do was get out of those leases with Jeremy, because he was like,
get me out of here.
And he enlisted the help of none other than Thomas Jeremy and John Larner.
I knew we weren't done with them yet.
And in a letter from October 3rd, 1848, Rush laid out his plan to them vaguely hinting at the idea of retaking Stanfield Hall.
And he figured what we can do is that Thomas Jeremy and John Larner will take possession
of it, their family.
So he said after the new possessors take possession of Stanfield Hall, this whole plan would mean that they now agree
to new terms for his tendency leases at a much lower rate.
So he said, help me take over this place
and give me a lower rate on my tendency.
Okay.
Okay.
Help me take over the place, you get Stanfield Hall,
and then by taking over Stanfield Hall,
you take on my tendency agreements,
you give me a lower rate and we all win.
Okay.
Which is, to them sounds good.
Sounds like a good plant, I would think.
But they weren't exactly confident in rushes ability to prove that Thomas Jeremy was the
rightful heir to the family state.
Because they've already tried that.
They've already tried that.
They're not plain and simple.
And they're like, we've been down this road.
We've been in court.
Many times. And the court just said, no. So the two of them said, no, thank you, which is shocking. But then so
they were like, no, thank you. We're good. But then James Rush produced what he claimed
to be George Preston's Reverend George Preston, the father, his original will, which he said
named Thomas Jeremy as the heir.
But that doesn't even make any sense.
That's not his child.
Exactly.
Well, like that would never change that.
James Rush had forged this document only a couple of days before this.
Correct.
So the forged documents apparently were witnessed being forged by Russia's mistress, Emily Sandford.
The plot thickens baby.
And even though they were clearly forged
in that Emily had watched the whole thing go down,
Thomas and John were like, sounds good to me.
That seems like something you could prove.
So they were like, let's go.
We'll help you with this. So in the weeks before the actual, because they weren't just planning
to just take over Stanfield Hall. Their plan was to kill Isaac Jeremy. They needed to get
him out of the way forever. So in the weeks before this all happened, and they, I think
what their plan was, it was to like take over the hall, but rush his plan, I believe all along was to get him gone.
Right. So in the weeks before this all happened, rush started showing someone usual behavior.
He would go out late at night with his gun. And he would claim he was looking for poachers
on the property, but his mistress there. Emily was like, he would just go trudging off
with his gun. And it was like not something he did. She was like, I
think he was losing it. Yeah. And on the morning of November 28th, he instructed
a local farmhand to please lay a path of straw from Russia's homestead on his
least land all the way towards the fields behind Stanford Hall.
That's, Jim Field Hall, excuse me.
And he said, so he was like, you do that
while me and my family go into town for the afternoon.
And later, it was revealed that he had actually
instructed this young farmhand to scatter the hay
so that it would make sure not to leave footprints
when he walked from his place to the sandfield hall.
I had a feeling that's where you were going with that.
Now, when they came back from an afternoon out,
Emily Sanford, his mistress, began making dinner
and Rush told her,
there's just time for me to go into the garden
and fire off my gun.
And she was like, what?
At what?
You just eat my dinner, mother fucker.
Yeah, like what?
He didn't say what he was shooting at
or why he was going out to shoot.
And so she was just kind of like,
there's time.
And she was like, not dinners, ready, mother fucker.
He's like, oh shit, Emily, I can shoot my gun
for like a little bit.
Couple minutes. There's like time. He's like a child. She's like where though? And he for like a little bit. Couple minutes?
There's like time.
He's like a child.
She's like where though and he's like in the garden.
She's like at one, he's like nothing in particular.
Just shooting.
Just shooting.
Just shooting.
That's all weird.
So she was just like, I kept him like out you go.
And when he came back a short time later for dinner,
Emily noticed he seemed very irritated, much
more irritated than when he had left.
And he got out of there, babe.
And yeah, and so he also brought up this weird story.
He said, I've been thinking a good deal about the story we read the other day about the
Scottish chief.
And what he was referring to was a well-known parable about the Battle of Benicburn by author Robert
Bruce.
And he said, I've tried several times and the next time perhaps I shall be successful.
And he was like, what the fuck are you talking about?
And she later said that he appeared extremely agitated.
And she supposed him to be in tears, though she couldn't understand why.
He was rambling, crying, crying.
It's almost in tears, like, very agitated.
And he was like, what the fuck's going on?
Or Emily.
Sometime between 7 and 8 p.m., just after they finished dinner,
James stood up from the table, didn't say a fucking word,
but just went into his bedroom,
dressed himself in a dark cloak,
donned a mask to cover his face.
No.
Then armed himself with a pistol
and just left the house without saying anything.
Put a mask on.
And Emily just watched this entire thing,
which I'm like, Emily, get out of there.
Come on, girl.
Get out.
You gotta do something here.
So he just leaves and puts on like a disguise, like a dark cloak, a mask.
That's scary.
Which I guess the mask was like a face mask with like whiskers on it or some shit.
What?
Yeah.
Now that happens on the property.
Where are we?
And at Sanfield Hall, the Jeremy family had just finished up dinner.
Some sources say they were having a small dinner party, but either way, they had just finished
up dinner a little before 8 p.m. And Isaac had just hung out at the dinner table. And Isaac
Jr. and his wife went to the parlor for tea. Okay. And the like workers began clearing dishes
and all that fun stuff.
And Isaac's senior got up, left the room,
and he went out onto the porch to get some air,
which is something he literally always did after dinner.
It was a very routine thing for him.
This was almost like a ritual after dinner for him.
Now having been employed by the family
for many, many years, James Bloomfield, Rush, would
have definitely known that at this same time every night after dinner, he would be out
there on the porch a little before 8 p.m.
Oh, no.
Taking it in some way.
I'm scared.
So, as soon as Isaac Sr. went out the door and onto the porch, Rush stepped out from
the shadows, raised a pistol,
and fired a single shot into his chest.
Without saying a word.
The bullet passed through his heart
and knocked him onto his back and he died instantly.
Oh, that's so awful.
Uh, then James Rush entered the house from the side door
and passed the main staircase.
And as he did, he dropped two pieces of paper from his cloak.
So he was messy already.
OK.
And he moved through the house and was
spotted by the butler who was frightened by the sight
of a gun and ran back into the darkened hallway
and hid himself out of you because he was scared.
Imagine.
Yeah.
Now, as James Rush passed through one door into the main hall, Isaac Jr. came out of the
parlor and they just looked at each other in silence and then Rush raised the gun and
shot him in the chest.
He dropped to the floor and he also died instantly.
Oh my God.
Now, obviously, people are hearing the sounds of gunshots happening. So Isaac Jr.'s wife ran into the hall from the parlor.
By the way, she's pregnant.
Yeah, I thought you had said that.
And just missed Rush as he entered into the dining room.
As she ran from there.
She found her husband's body and she screamed.
So her scream drew one of the maids, Eliza Chasney,
or Chasney, it's both, it's seen both ways
in different sources.
She ran into the hall, and the two of them
are standing in the hallway freaking out,
and Rush comes out of the dining room,
sees the two women, raises the pistol, and shoots twice.
He hit Mrs. Jeremy in the arm, she's the pregnant wife.
Oh my God. And hit Eliza Chesney in the leg. Both of them fell to the floor and they both tried
to pretend they were dead. Oh, now he figured he had killed the whole family, right? So he left
the house through the same side door that he went into, fled into the fields and made his way back
to his home's dead. Remember via that hay-covered path that had been laid out.
But as he did this, he was spotted by several workers
who lived on the estate and had been drawn out of their homes
on the property by the sound noise of gunshots and screams.
Does he still have his cloak and his mask on?
He does.
They all saw a black-cloked man escaping into the fields. Okay.
Now, but the thing would be Emily saw him put on that cloak.
Right.
And so fearing the house was being attacked by the same kind of like, we're going to take
over shit.
A stable hand made his way to the edge of the property, swam across the moat to get to
the house because it does have a moat.
Hell yeah. And went to the nearby home of a man named Coleman, who sent to get to the house because it does have a moat. Hell yeah.
And went to the nearby home of a man named Coleman,
who sent the message to the Norwich police
and they let them know what had happened.
Oh yeah, yeah.
So after sending help from Norwich, Mr. Coleman,
the neighbor gathered other neighbors
and they all made their way to Stanford Hall
to just try to help however they could.
And when they got there, they found Isaac Senior dead on the front porch, Isaac Junior
dead on the floor in the main hallway just outside the house.
And nearby, they found Eliza Chasney who was wounded in the leg.
And by that time, the other workers had carried Isaac Junior's wife upstairs to a bedroom,
and were doing their best to treat her wound in her arm,
because she was bleeding heavily,
and the upper part of her arm was really badly damaged.
And they carried both men into the parlor,
both the bodies of the two Isaac Jeremy men,
and they noticed cinched clothing around the bullet wounds, which indicated that they had
been shot at pretty close range.
Although they had been through a wild ordeal, Isaac Jr.'s wife Ann Mrs. Chasney both said
they thought they recognized the shooter and they said, it's James Bloomfield rush.
How do you think they knew? So he was wearing a fake beard, a mask, and a cloak,
but they said that they knew his body type
and they knew how he held certain things
and how he walked.
And they were like, we know that that was him.
He had like a specific way about him.
So when the telegraph was sent to the Norwich police,
it included a note from the local magistrate,
Mr. Can,
instructing them to apprehend James Bloomfield Rush.
Damn.
No, police made their way to Stanfield Hall,
while Rush ran to his house a little after 9 p.m.
knocked on the door to be led in by Emily.
There was no light in the front room,
because you have to remember, this is 1800,
it's not like they flipped on the light.
And so Emily knew, only knew that it was James entering the house, didn't see how he was dressed or
what he was carrying. She said he went right upstairs, directly upstairs. And when he came back down
stairs, he wasn't wearing any boots, any outdoor attire, and he instructed her to light a fire and go
to bed. Okay. But before she retired for the evening,
Rush said, quote, if any inquiries made about me,
say I was not out more than 10 minutes.
So a few hours later, Emily was awoken
by a loud banging at the door and omitted, find Rush,
who was now coming back.
He had left.
Okay.
And he was trembling and seemed very upset.
And he said, now you be firm and remember
that I was only out 10 minutes.
Oh, okay.
He told her again.
This time she said in a much more aggressive tone.
So he has now returned at 9 p.m.
after murdering this whole family.
He was trying to.
He has taken off everything that he wore.
He's come downstairs, told her to light a fire
and to go directly to bed.
Don't pass go.
Go to bed.
So she was like, cool, I'll just go up.
And as he does this, he tells her,
I was out 10 minutes if anyone asks.
She's like, got it.
She goes to bed.
Then hours later,
he's awoken by banging at the door.
It's him arriving back from somewhere.
I thought you had misspoke. I was like, wait, what? He had gone out again. And then he had said,
by the way, remember, I was only gone 10 minutes. A more aggressive time. And she's like, what the
fuck is going on? So by the morning, police had completely surrounded the rush homestead.
And as soon as they saw the first lantern lit inside, they summoned a stable boy named Savory
and told her to call Rush to the door.
So as Rush, of course, said,
what's like, how could I ever be at fault
for the mayhem that happened at Stanfield Hall?
And he said, good God, I hope they do not think it was me.
And he said this to Emily in front of everybody
and he said, it is rather a serious charge.
Yeah. And Emily's like, what the fuck am I supposed to say here?
And upstairs in the main bedroom, investigators started searching and they found two guns and a
closet along with rushes, black cloak and boots. And both of them were wet. Like you've been walking
through a do-e-field. Like I'm glad you're dumb, but I thought when he left again, it was to discard those things.
And in front of the police, they heard Rush say to Emily, I'm accused of murdering
Jeremy and his son.
And he said, but you and Savory can clear me for he washed my boots at half past five
and you know I didn't go out.
So now he's trying to get her to lie for him.
And in all the confusion and just mayhem that was happening here and probably the stress
Emily had forgotten exactly what she was supposed to say to the police.
So she told the investigators that, yes, James had gone out the previous evening because
at first he had told her to say that.
Yeah.
But he was in the she could have said, but he was only out for about a quarter of an hour.
So she's added a little time on that.
Mom, you were supposed to say,
dead men.
And Rush is listening to this.
And he stops her and says,
I was not out more than 10 minutes
and you know I had my slip shoes on.
So he's like, I was not wearing those boots
and I was only out for 10 minutes.
Uh oh.
And for some reason and thank goodness, Emily got a little brave.
And she said, I don't know if you had or not, I did not see you put your boots on.
She said, fuck you, I'm not playing this game.
I'm not going to lie for you.
She said, I didn't see you put them on.
Good for her.
So during questioning, James Rush repeated his story several times over saying that Emily
was his alibi, but he definitely acknowledged that he and the Jeremy family had not been
on good terms in recent years.
He was like, I'm not going to lie about that.
Yeah.
He said, I have no doubt I shall be suspected because we have been on such bad terms.
But he said, but lately, the old one and I have been more friendly.
But the young one was my greatest enemy.
That's funny. I'm not sure. I'm sorry, I don't know.
I'm not sure.
I should say that.
Either way, both of them are dead, my God.
And when they had no more questions, James Bloomfield, Rush, was taken into custody, he was
transported to the local jail, I think it's Windman him, Bridewell, and he was questioned
further by the magistrates.
Now Rush was pretty much identified
as the shooter by like many people.
A traditional investigation proved kind of unnecessary
at that point, but once the bodies had been removed
from Stanfield Hall and the initial chaos
had kind of subsided, police officers did begin
an investigation into the house.
And that's when they discovered the papers that had dropped out of rushes, cloak, wavy
it at turn.
I forgot about those.
Yeah, he's a mess.
And the two papers appeared to be the covers of a book.
And on the back of one was written a note.
This note said, there are seven of us here, three of us outside and four inside the hall,
all armed as you see us too. If any of you servants
offer to leave the premises or to follow, you will be shot dead. Therefore, all of you
keep in the servants hall and you nor anyone else will take any harm, any harm, for we
are only come to take possession of the Stanfield Hall property.
Okay, so they were going to try to make it look like another seas kind of thing.
Yeah, and it was signed signed Thomas Jeremy, the owner. What?
So Thomas Jeremy. Oh, oh, okay, yeah, that guy. Yeah, I know it's hard. No, no, no,
I don't believe you're being like, where is that guy? I was like, oh, no, because remember,
they had that whole plan. Thomas and John, we're gonna take it over. Yeah, so he went against the
plan entirely. It feels like he took it a little into his own hands.
Sounds like he went a little, woo, woo, woo.
So news of the murders were reported in the press a day
or two or later,
and the sensational language being indicative
of Isaac Jeremy's important role in the community.
So the Times London's paper of record,
described the killings as the most atrocious murders
ever perpetrated in Norfolk,
or perhaps in any other English county.
I don't know. So obviously his position is what's making this the most atrocious murder.
Of course.
Similarly, the Liverpool Mercury referred to the scene at the hall as the dreadful and mysterious
tragedy. Oh my god. Now, the coroner began his examination of the bodies, and the police in Norwich shifted their focus
from Stanfield Hall to now James Rush's homestead.
The initial search of the home turned up a clearly wet cloak
and a set of clearly wet boots.
Also a pair of recently fired guns
which suggested that Rush could have been involved
but the discoveries made on the second search
lift little doubt that he was responsible.
In the closet in Rush's bedroom, investigators found a woman's black wig
and long face veil hidden in a box at the back of the closet.
Aw, it's weird.
In the same closet, they also found forged documents that Rush had used to
convince Thomas Jeremy and John Larner to participate in the crimes
with him. That's a big yikes. Yeah.
Another search of the home, the investigators found additional disguises, including a black
wig of a particular make with moustacheos and whiskers coming round and under the chin.
Moustacheos, you say?
Moustacheos.
So we had all these fucking disguises hidden in his closet, like a weirdo.
Yeah, that's creepy.
Maybe he's just a Halloween outfit.
I don't think so.
Now, on November 30th, a jury was brought together
for the coroner's inquest, and they viewed the bodies
and heard the results of the coroner's examination.
And they also heard a number from a number of the staff
who was at Stanfield Hall on the night of the murders.
The butler who hid when he first saw them,
James Watson told the jury,
at the time I saw the man passing the corner,
it occurred to me that it was Mr. Rush.
Mm-hmm.
I knew Mr. Rush perfectly well.
The man I saw was like Mr. Rush in size, height,
and in his walk.
And Watson also told the jury that Rush was in the habit
of entering the house through the servant store
at the side of the building,
where the killer had also entered.
Right.
And he knew that, he said the reason that this is so pertinent
is he said that the door was never locked before 9 p.m.
Oh, and he knew that.
He said the cook who was also at the estate
that evening also said a similar thing.
He said, the moment I saw the man, it struck me.
It was Mr. Rush, who had very frequently within the last five months been at the hall.
The man was short and stout.
He held his head a little on one side.
Sorry, I just have to answer this.
Hello.
The moment I saw the man, it struck me.
It was Mr. Rush, who had very frequently within the last five months been at the hall. The man was short and stout. He held his head a little on one side just
in the way Mr. Rush carries it. He is a very particular way of walking and standing.
In my own mind, I think it was, it is impossible I can be mistaken in my opinion. I had such
an opportunity of seeing his person that I cannot be mistaken, although I cannot, from not having seen his face
positively swear it was him.
Okay.
So a third witness was a sheriff's officer named Mr. Bacon,
who had lived.
Oh yeah.
So gave evidence, and this is a quote,
gave evidence as to the certain expressions of Mr. Rush,
indicating revengeful feeling towards Mr. Jeremy. Now, the most important testimony came from Emily.
So she quickly abandoned any kind of alibi that he tried to force on her.
Under questioning from police, she refused to provide that alibi.
And initially, she told investigators she had been, quote,
reading a book which interested her very much,
and so she did not keep a very good accurate account of the time.
Okay.
So she said she couldn't be sure how long he had been out of the house.
But they pressed her and she caved and told investigators, rush, quote,
was absent from the house all the evening of the murder.
And when he came home, he appeared to be in a state of great agitation
and rushed into the house, saying he was very ill.
Now, according to Emily, after he had gone into his bedroom, she peered through the keyhole.
Oh.
And witnessed him removing the various pieces of disguise.
Because remember, when he came home, she said she couldn't see him very well.
Because it was dark.
It was no light. He just rushed upstairs.
Right.
But she looked through that keyhole and saw him taking off all the pieces of the disguise.
And she explained that he had pretended
to go out looking for poachers that evening,
though she very much doubted
that that was what he was doing when he left the house.
So her statement was given to the police
and the magistrate asked whether Rush had any questions
or anything to say in response.
And he said, no, she has said enough to hang me already.
Oh.
That was his response.
Damn.
She got killed.
So during the inquest, the corner happily reported
that both women were expected to survive.
That's good.
And despite the severity of the wounds to their arm and leg,
yeah, he hoped that they would be able to avoid any amputation.
Wow.
A few days later though, the situation definitely changed for Mrs. Jeremy, who shot in the left arm
above the elbow.
There was so much damage.
It had shattered the bone in several places, and the surgeons had to amputate her arm near
the shoulder, as she's pregnant.
Pregnant?
Holy shit.
Now, after hearing all the evidence, the jury left the inquest just for a little bit of time
to discuss what they heard.
And they returned with a verdict of willful murder
against James Bloomfield Rush,
and a warrant was issued for his arrest,
as well as the arrest of a key witness, Emily Sandford.
Why did she get arrested?
They were already in custody, so they weren't one out, just because she was there and she
had initially lied.
Now on March 29th, 1849, the trial began at the court of the sizes at Norwich Castle,
which was presided over at yet in a castle.
Presided over a castle.
By magistrate Baron Rolf.
There was a ton of news coverage about this,
a lot of public interest.
So it was packed, infected, mittens into the courtroom,
was by ticket only.
Wow.
And by 8 a.m., it was like packed full.
Damn.
Acting on behalf of the crown were Sargent Biles,
Prendergast, and Evans.
James Bloomfield Rush was acting as his own attorney.
Oh, no, honey.
Now, in addition to testimony,
the jury was going to see evidence
that included a ton of stuff.
But some of them were the forged documents,
the drawings of the property, floor plans,
scale models of Stanfield Hall, and Rush's farmhouse.
They'd all been created for the occasion.
And before opening statements were given,
the charges were read for the court.
And this is when Russia was asked to step forward
and repeat his plea.
And he replied, not guilty.
He was described as resolute and set,
but his hands trembled excessively,
not only at first, but during the day.
Reporters also said his shoulders support a short bullmech his hands trebled excessively, not only at first, but during the day.
Reporters also said his shoulders support a short bullmech on which a large and massive
head, which a craniologist would declare indicative of the possession of strong animal
passions and considerable intellectual power, is firmly set in such a way as to render it
rather difficult for its owner to look straight before him.
So his head was slightly crooked.
Slightly to one side, just like the staffers said.
That the person who came in and killed all those people had.
Yeah.
Now, during the jury selection, the name John Beals was called
and the prosecution objected, and this potential juror was dismissed.
And in response to this, Rush interrupted to ask why the man had been dismissed.
And the judge explained it was because the prosecution objected.
And Rush said, I wish to make one observation to the jury.
I shall not challenge any of them, but I hope if any of them have any unfair influence
in this case, they will retire of themselves.
So what he had wanted was for his comments to the jury to emphasize his cooperation and
how he wanted this whole thing to be fair.
Yeah.
You know, because he's so innocent, he just wants all this to go the right way.
But he didn't understand how the process worked, which just made him seem dumb.
Yeah, because that's what they're doing right now, too.
Exactly.
And it's like, so now you're going to defend yourself.
So now you've already stepped into this looking very unprepared with this whole thing.
Yeah.
So that's not good.
And this was demonstrated again just a few minutes later because he asked the judge, my
Lord, may I make a few observations before the council makes his opening speech?
And the role for applied, this is not the right time to do that.
You'll have an opportunity here after.
Yeah.
So he doesn't even know how this all works.
So he's going to defend it.
So you need to defend it.
Yeah.
So they did the jury selection.
And Sergeant Biles took his place in front of the courtroom and began his opening remarks.
So the prosecutor laid out all the evidence against James Rush and said about the year 1844,
the late Mr. Jeremy advanced to Mr. Rush considerable sums of money
upon the Potash Farm or Potash Farm, who knows,
the balance of which was coming due just days
before the murders occurred.
So he was going to have to pay this debt,
days before the murders happened.
And lacking the money to pay what was owed to Jeremy,
Sergeant Biles explained that Rush had intended
to kill the Jeremy family to avoid any of the negative
consequences of his debt.
That makes sense.
Now, as evidence of motive and intent,
Sergeant Biles read aloud from the letters exchanged
between Rush and his son, sent just after the civil trial
between Jeremy and Rush for unpaid fees,
and also showed that forged documents
intended to mislead the jury as to who was the rightful heir of the Jeremy estate and
the ownership, and like who should take ownership of Stanfield Hall.
Those had been discovered, like we said, hidden in a box in Rush's closet.
So special Sergeant Biles told the jury, now gentlemen, I will call your attention to
the contents of this pamphlet
as showing you two things,
the state of the prisoner's mind,
and that he contemplated taking some steps
with reference to the claim of these persons
to the Stanfield Hall property.
But I shall also put in a letter,
put in a letter in the handwriting of the prisoner
in order to show his feelings towards the late Mr. Jeremy.
So as far as the prosecution was concerned, the his feelings towards the late Mr. Jeremy.
So as far as the prosecution was concerned, the case was pretty simple against Rush.
He owed a ton of money to Jeremy, and he couldn't pay.
Rather than find a way to get the money or try to arrange some sort of better deal, he just
came up with a plan to kill the Jeremy family, conspire with Thomas Jeremy and John Larner
to forge the documents, and it would ultimately benefit everybody involved.
It was pretty block-and-white to me.
Yeah.
His evidence to support this theory was pretty strong, and they found the recently fired
guns in Russia's bedroom closet, along with the boots, the cloak, the disguises, all
of that.
And finally, most importantly, they had Emily's testimony, which not only contradicted
what Russia was saying about that night,
but it also led directly to a lot of the evidence that was being presented in court,
including the forged documents that were hidden in a very secret location.
So once the prosecution had finished presenting their case, James Bloomfield, Rosh rose and began
James Bloomfield, Rosh Rose, and began what what became a 14-hour speech. No.
In a defense.
14 hours.
How do you, like, consecutively?
Yes.
14 hours.
How do you even talk that long?
And this was described by the press as, quote, without making any impression whatsoever
in his favor.
His address was full of repetitions and everything really material might have been said
in a quarter of the time.
So he just fucking rambled for 14 hours.
14 hours.
Which part is pissed everyone off?
Unbelievable.
Yeah.
At that point, I'd be like, well, you're guilty for a ride off.
You're guilty of being a asshole.
Yeah.
Now in his version of the events, he was quote, innocent,
but admitted that he knew something about,
was about to take place at the hall
before the night of the murders.
According to him, a day before,
he had been approached by Jeremy and Larner,
Thomas Jeremy and John Larner,
who wanted to enlist him in their plan to take San Phil Tall by force.
Just as they attempted to do years earlier, he was like, remember, they've done this before.
Of course, they're going to do it again.
But he said, no, no, I won't help you with that.
Now he's flipped it.
And the following evening, he had gone out after dinner to check
the grounds for poachers as he obviously did all the time, even though Emily was like he didn't do
that all the time. But when he got to the edge of his property, he felt ill and decided to turn back.
And then he heard a pistol go off and then a second shot and it caused him to run back into his house. Okay. Now he said after his, so after his rambling and exhaustive speech,
he began making several complaints to the judge and the jury
about, among other things, the way he was treated in the press
by the, and by the magistrates, and by 8 p.m. that evening,
the judge had finally had enough and adjourned the court.
It was like I'm done listening to you. I'm surprised they let him go on that long before doing that.
Yeah. And they adjourned for a few days.
They didn't come back for a few days.
And then when they did, Rush called a bunch of witnesses, all of whom provided testimony that was
irrelevant, pretty contradictory to what would help him. And all none of them were contradictory to the evidence
that was presented by the prosecution.
So none of it helped.
Wild.
Because it's black and white here.
So Rush rested his case after six days
and Judge Baron Rolf began summarizing the case for the court.
And according to the press,
the process was repeatedly interrupted by the prisoner
who attempted to correct him and to give different versions
of the evidence.
Wow.
And finally, he dismissed the jury to review and deliberate.
Now, given how sensational the crimes had been
and how crazy this trial had been, the audience in the court
waited, they all waited.
Like they wanted to hear this.
And they thought they were gonna like wait for a while
to hear this, like, they thought all this was gonna build up.
But the jury returned just five minutes later
with a guilty verdict, of course.
Because they were like, fuck you, man.
Yeah, I fuck that.
Rush was pissed and yelled,
I am innocent all the same and God Almighty knows it.
So, I don't know when you got there, man.
Everyone went into a tizzy, but order had to be restored, and the judge addressed
Rush directly.
He said, James Bloomfield Rush, after a trial unusually protracted, you have found, you have
been found guilty of the charge of willful murder.
A crime the highest any human being can perpetrate on another.
The deepest under any circumstances of extenuation, but I regret to say that in your case, there
is everything which could add a deeper die to guilt the most horrible.
It appears from letters which you yourself put into that to the father of the unfortunate
victim of your malice, you owe a deep debt of gratitude.
You commenced a career of crime by endeavoring to cheat your landlord.
You followed it up by making the unfortunate girl
whom you had subdued the tool
whereby you should commit forgery.
And having done that,
you terminated your guilty career
by the murder of the son and grandson
of your friend and benefactor.
More cannot be said.
It unfortunately sometimes happens
that great guilt is too nearly connected with
something that is calculated to dazzle the mind. But unfortunately, in your case, you have
made vice as loathsome, as loathsome as it is terrible.
Wow.
Beautiful. Very poetic.
Very poetic.
Russia immediately tried to argue with the judge again.
No, I get the final word. And the judge cut him off and said,
you have been convicted on testimony so clear
the observation and comment are unnecessary.
Wow.
So he's like, I don't want to hear shit from you.
Shut up.
It's black and white that you did this.
And with that, he was removed from the court
and taken back to his cell.
Now, after the reading of the verdict,
James Bloomfield, Rush was sentenced to be hanged on the grounds of Norwich Castle on April 23rd, 1849.
And it was reported that while he was waiting for the execution date, he sat quietly in his cell and didn't have any visitors.
He wouldn't let anyone in.
But the night before his execution, he received a short note from one of his children.
Oh, that's sad. I forgot that he had kids.
Yeah.
On April 23rd, the excitement that it surrounded
the initial trial seemed to have come back
because now we got ourselves an 1800's execution
and you know people love that shit.
Oh.
So apparently crowds of individuals from both sexes
had been hurrying throughout the morning
from all parts of the county,
and even far beyond it, to the awful scene of agnomenous death. Wow. That was from the
Caldonian Mercury paper in 1849. So a little after 12 p.m. he was led out of his cell and he walked
past all the onlookers and led to the gallows. And in the days leading up to this,
he had tried to persuade anyone who listened
that he was innocent, but nobody believed him.
And because of that, when he asked if he had any,
when he was asked if he had anything to say
before his execution, he said no.
And all he did was simply repeat the Lord's prayer
to himself quietly while the lever was pulled
and the floor dropped out beneath him.
And he was killed instantly.
Wow.
He had no family member willing to claim his body.
James Blue Rush.
James Blue Rush.
Yeah.
James Blue and Phil Rush was buried on the grounds of Norwich Castle.
And after his death, the press reported, thus was closed the life of him whose murderous
deeds and other wicked acts have excited universal abhorrence
and of whom it may be said England never furnished
his parallel.
Ooh, that's haunting.
So just like as a closing thing here,
a death mask of James Bloomfield Rush
is on display at the Welcome Collection in well in London.
I saw that.
Yeah.
Stafford Shear Pottery's produced collectible figures
of Rush and Sanford, Emily, his mistress.
I don't know about that.
Plus the locations of the farm, their homestead
and Stanfield Hall and Norwich Castle.
So you could get collectible figures of these things.
Interesting.
He was also Rush, himself, was made into a wax figure
and was at Madame Tussauds.
Wow.
There was a time when Madame Tussauds had a chamber of horror
section.
We had a couple of other people that have been in that section.
Yeah, from long, long ago, like 1800s.
That's creepy.
Yeah, they had a chamber of horror section
that would have murderers like crime scenes and shit. Ooh. He was on display in that from 1849 until
1971. Wow. Yeah, that's wild. There was several like, you know, I think there was a novel
made about this case. There was, it was the inspiration for a film from 1948 called Blanche
Fury, which starred Valerie Hobson and Stuart Granger.
Listen to that.
And last but not least, Charles Dickens
was very intrigued by these murders.
Brando.
He was there for the execution.
He was present for it.
I think I feel like he's been present
at other executions.
Charles Dickens loved an execution.
Yeah, I think he was at a couple.
You're right.
Yeah.
He went later went to Stanfield's Hall because you could, you can still go. Yeah, I think he was, he was at a couple, you're right. Yeah. He went, later, went to Stanfield's hall,
because you could, you can still go,
and I still have, so I mean,
I think it's like a private residence now.
Yes, I don't go there.
Don't go there, yeah, don't do that.
But you could before, like, actually go and see it.
Right, right.
And he called it, which this is such a fucking,
this is a poet like,
author, what are they saying?
He called it, quote,
a grand place for a scoundrel's exit.
Oh, that's nice.
You got it.
That's nice.
A grand place for a scoundrel's exit.
That's deep.
What a thought.
And that is the story of the murders at Stanfield Hall.
Wow, what a wild ride.
It was.
Because I really thought like Thomas and John,
yeah, I thought they were going to be like the key
apples and the stories here.
The main baddies, the main baddies,
the big bads, if you will.
And then they flip James on his ear
because he's the one who stops them the first time.
Yeah, and you don't think he's coming back.
No, I don't know how to expect.
And then all of a sudden you're like,
guess what?
I'm like, well shit James.
Oh, it's crazy.
You really fucked me up.
I'm gonna go have a glass of coffee after this.
That's me.
A glass of coffee.
I just said, just go get a glass of coffee.
Oh, nice mug of dead slut, baby.
Dead sled.
Well, we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it., but I swear that you don't
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