The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Capital’s criminals of the past have their mugshots laid bare for 2017

Rogues’ gallery of edinburgh’s least finest goes on public display

- BLAIR MEIKLE

A fascinatin­g display of crime mugshots from the past forms the centrepiec­e of a new exhibition in Edinburgh.

It features the faces of thieves, confidence tricksters and pickpocket­s who felt the long arm of the law between 1870 and 1917.

The images of the Victorian and Edwardian era crooks are accompanie­d by transcript­s from criminal trials which reveal fascinatin­g personal details about the offenders, their victims and the society that produced them.

The National Records of Scotland (NRS) aims to provide an insight into the methods of policing north of the border The free exhibition, at General Register House, also sheds new light on how photograph­y was used by law enforcemen­t agencies as the years went by.

Among the faces in Rogues Gallery Faces of Crime 1870-1917 is that of 25-year-old James Donovan, born in Mauchline, East Ayrshire. He faced several charges of pickpocket­ing plus single charges of assault and larceny (theft or personal property) in 1901.

Flat-capped and walrus-moustached Robert Trotter of Berwickshi­re could be a direct descendent of Only Fools and Horses’ Rodney and Del Boy as he was charged with selling stolen goods as well as housebreak­ing and theft of sheep.

Bearded William Stewart looks like a rabbit caught in the headlights as he is snapped after being arrested for theft in 1874.

Lily Barr, 17, of Wishaw suffered the same fate in 1911, as did Joan McLean in 1874, scruffy looking Irishman James McGuire in 1906 and Bridget Duffy from Edinburgh.

Thomas Queen, photograph­ed in 1910 aged 23, was charged with several offences, most of which were theft and robbery.

In January 1900 William Paterson, who had an alias of John McDonald, was a 58-year-old ironmonger whose crime is not disclosed, but he had 10 previous conviction­s.

Not all of the pictures show classic dishevelle­d looking criminals – American Horace William Chapman looks every inch the Edwardian gentleman, despite being charged with “Stg. Pictures, False Pretenses”. It is presumed that “Stg” refers to stealing.

Likewise Elizabeth Stewart, photograph­ed in 1873, faced charges for “falsehood, fraud and viceful imposition”, but her appearance is more that of a classy Victorian lady than a deceitful crook.

Jocelyn Grant, outreach activist at NRS, said the exhibition revealed “fascinatin­g personal details about criminals, their victims and the society that produced them”.

He added: “Rogues Gallery demonstrat­es how much we can learn about people of the past from criminal records and provides an insight into the developmen­t of policing and detection methods in Scotland.

“The exhibition also includes a snapshot of the developmen­t of photograph­y, as police and their forensic assistants began to realise its potential to record crime scenes and other physical evidence.”

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 ?? Picture: Alamy. ?? General Register House, where the photos will be displayed.
Picture: Alamy. General Register House, where the photos will be displayed.
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