Florence Maybrick achieved notoriety in 1889 when she was found guilty of murdering her husband by arsenic. Although she escaped the death penalty, two sisters did make their way to the gallows after taking four lives by adminstering the deadly poison.

In 1880 Catherine Flannagan and Margaret Higgins, both Irish widows, lived in Skirving Street. The others in the house were Catherine's 22 year old son John Flannagan, lodger Patrick Jennings and his 16 year old daughter Margaret, as well as another lodger Thomas Higgins and his 8 year old daughter Mary. In December of that year John Flannagan died, apparently of consumption and his mother collected over £71 insurance money.

A year after John's death, Margaret had married Thomas Higgins and by November 1882 young Mary had died, having been insured for £22. Within two months Margaret Jennings was dead and again insurance money was collected. On each occasion the sisters had waited until the victim was already ill before administering the fatal dose, making it easier to get a doctor to issue a death certificate.

After these three deaths the sisters moved, so as not to arouse any further suspicion, to 105 Latimer Street. No deaths occured there and in September 1883 they moved to 27 Ascot Street, where Thomas Higgins was selected as the next victim. He was insured for nearly £100, but an attempt to take out a policy for an extra £50 failed when a drunken Thomas refused to undergo a medical examination, a fact he probably told to his brother Patrick.

After Thomas' death on 2nd October 1883, Patrick visited a number of insurance societies and found that the money had already been drawn. He approached the doctor, and they went to the coroner with their suspicions. The funeral was stopped so a post mortem could take place and Higgins was arrested. Flannagan fled the house but was taken into custody a few days later.

Both were charged on 16th October after arsenic was found in Thomas Higgins' corpse. The three other victims were exumed and traces of arsenic found in each. After a three day trial, the sisters were found guilty in 40 minutes and sentenced to death. They were hanged at Kirkdale Gaol on 3rd March 1884.


THE SKIRVING STREET POISONERS
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Catherine Flanagan
Margaret Higgins
How the Police Illustrated News reported the murders
Skirving Street, scene of the 1st 3 murders, today.