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Susan Newell


Susan Newell (1893 – 10 October 1923) was the last woman to be hanged as capital punishment in Scotland. She was arrested after acting suspiciously and the discovery of the body of a thirteen year old newspaper boy, John Johnston. Although there were no witness accounts of him being killed, circumstantial evidence was presented at her trial. She was found guilty of his murder, a plea of insanity was rejected and she was sentenced to death.

Susan McAllister or Newell are from a poor background. She married and had a daughter, Janet Mcleod, then divorced. By 1923 she had remarried, to John Newell, an ex-serviceman, now working as a Glasgow subway worker.. The three lived in a rented room in Newlands Street, Coatbridge.

John Johnston had left his house in the afternoon of 20 June and had not returned. Another boy had met him at 6pm and given him nine papers to sell. The following day Newell and her daughter set off on foot with an unwieldy bundle carried on a Go Cart. While walking out of Coatbridge on the Glasgow Road a truck driver offered them a lift. He took them as far as the East end of Glasgow and dropped them off in Duke Street. Locals were suspicious of Newell and the police were called. Newell was followed as she went into a back court and emerged without the bundle. She was apprehended and the boy's body discovered. On 22 June a post-mortem examination was carried out at Glasgow Central Police Mortuary. Johnson died by strangulation. On the same day John Newell presented himself to a police station in Haddington. The truck driver came forward as a witness. On 26 June Newell and her husband appeared at Airdrie Sheriff court where they were both accused of murder; they made no plea and were returned to prison.

On 8 September 1823 Newell and her husband appeared at the Glasgow Sheriff court and both pled not guilty, while he also lodged a special defence of alibi

Newell and her husband were both put on trial and the case was heard by Lord Alness at the High Court in Glasgow and the case began on 18 September. There were 70 witnesses cited and 40 gave evidence on the first day of the trial. Her daughter, Janet, testified against her, describing how the body of the paperboy had been wheeled through the streets on a pram.


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