Mr. John George Littlechild, who died at Matlock on Tuesday, aged 75, was formerly a well-known detective at Scotland Yard. Perhaps the most famous case in which he was concerned was that of the four detective-inspectors and the solicitor, who were charged with conspiracy to defeat the ends of justice in connexion with the great Turf fraud on a French lady, the Comtesse de Goncourt. This was in 1877. Three of the detectives and the solicitor were convicted and sentenced each to two years' hard labour. Littlechild was also concerned in dealing with the outbreak of Fenian dynamite outrages in London, with the Phœnix Park murders, and with the case of Oscar Wilde. He rose to be Chief Inspector at the "Yard," and retired a good many years ago. The funeral will be on Saturday at Putney Vale Cemetery, at noon.
Related pages: |
John Littlechild |
Dissertations: A Mystery Play : Police Opinions on Jack the Ripper |
Message Boards: John George Littlechild |
Official Documents: The Littlechild Letter |
Police Officials: John George Littlechild |
Press Reports: Echo - 22 September 1888 |
Press Reports: Times [London] - 4 January 1923 |