Episodios

  • 009: Life of a Surgeon - Apothecary 1750-1850: Guest Interview with Suzie Grogan
    Aug 8 2021


    Suzie Grogan The Glamorous Life of a Surgeon Apothecary 1750-1850 

    My guest today is fellow Pen & Sword author, Suzie Grogan. Suzie’s written three books now but it is her second book, Death, Disease and Dissection that we’re really focusing on in this episode. 

    Join me as our chat turns to the world of medical history and the life of a surgeon-apothecary in the mid 18th and 19th Century. 

    We don't forget the body snatching in this episode and look at it from a slightly different angle than usual. 

    *Listener discretion is advised at the beginning of this episode 

    1:12   Introduction & how a murder inspired Suzie’s first book ‘Shell-Shocked Britain’

    5:07   The Structure of the medical profession

    9:42   The varied work of a Surgeon - Apothecary: From rolling pills to lancing abscesses 

    11:40  Inside the 19th century dissecting room 

    14:07  John Keats as a Medical student

    14:22  Druin Burch ‘Digging Up The Dead’ & accounts of 19th dissecting rooms 

    15:12  The horrors of cross-contamination & germs in the dissecting room 

    19:09  Digging deeper into the life of a 19th century medical student

    19:36  Students providing cadavers for dissection & anatomists relationship with body snatchers     

    23:16  I’m asked a surprise question on the total number of cadavers stolen

    24:19  The value of the human body at the time of the Anatomy Act   

    26:13  The fear of being dissected 

    27:03  The glamorous life of the Surgeon - Apothecary 

    29:37  Quack Doctors

    30:48  We dive back into the subject of body snatching

    33:41  Keats: His medical notebook & time as a medical student

    39:18  The influence of medicine on Keates poetry

    40:50  Suzie’s thoughts on body snatching & its importance in medical history

    43:39  How to find more from my guest, Suzie Grogan 


    Books & Resources Mentioned In This Episode Include:

    Ruth Richardson ‘Death, Dissection & the Destitute’ 

    Druin Burch ‘Digging Up The Dead’ 

    E.S Thompson The Gem Flockheart Series (Vol 1: Beloved Poison

    The British Newspaper Archive 

    Suzie’s Book (In Order Of Publication) 

    Shell Shocked Britain

    Death, Disease & Dissection 

    John Keats: Poetry, Life & Landscape 

    You can Follow Suzie On Social Media 

    Twitter

    Facebook 

    Website 


    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at diggingup1800.com

    Twitter @Diggingup1800

    Instagram @Diggingup1800

    Facebook @Diggingup1800




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    50 m
  • 008: Body Snatching In America: Guest Interview with Chris Woodyard
    Jul 17 2021

    In this episode, I’m joined by fellow body snatching enthusiast Chris Woodyard, author of the popular series Haunted Ohio as well as the fabulous ‘The Victorian Book of the Dead’.

    We get down to the basics of body snatching and compare the practice between Britain and America and for us two, nothing is off limits!

    From repurposing clothes from cadavers to the 'Coffin Torpedo' and everything in between!

    All the gory details can be found at: 

    2:37    How to take a body out of the grave

    4:42    Digging up putrid cadavers & what to do with the grave clothes

    8:09    Body snatchers and their side hustles 

    9:00    Packing cadavers ready for shipping & a trunk murder  

    17:33  Body snatching prevention, the ‘Coffin Torpedo’ & how to get a body out of the grave

    28:46  The snatching of Senator John Scott Harrison 

    34:18  Punishments for body snatching & the role of the anatomists

    38:50  The anatomists & their relationship with body snatchers 

    39:08  William Cunningham aka ‘Old Cunny’ & his ‘apprentice’ Charles Keaton

    42:20  Anatomy Riots & Anatomy Acts

    44:22 Chris’ favourite body snatchers including an American burking Case    

    49:58 A final Body snatching legend to finish with 


    Books Mentioned In This Episode

    • Brian Bailey: The Diary of a Resurrectionist 
    • Curt Dalton: Body Snatching in Ohio
    • Ruth Richardson: Death, Dissection & The Destitute
    • Michael Sappol:  A Traffic in Dead Bodies

    If you’d like to read about Waterloo Teeth head over to my website for the post  Waterloo Teeth: A History of Georgian Dentures 

    For more on the Liverpool Body Snatching Scandal of 1826, listen to Episode 2 of the podcast or head over to my blog where you can read the story in full and see the accompanying pictures. 

    Want to follow Chris and find out what she’s up to? 

    You can follow Chris on Twitter and Facebook 

    Chris’ fantastic website Haunted Ohio Books will keep you hooked for hours!  

    Chris is also the author of the Haunted Ohio Book Series and fabulous  ‘The VIctorian Book of The Dead’

    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at diggingup1800.com

    Twitter
    @Diggingup1800
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    @Diggingup1800
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    52 m
  • 007: Helen Miller & A Body Snatching Tale From Lasswade, Midlothian
    Jul 10 2021

    This episode is slightly different as I take a look at the story of a female body snatcher based just outside of Edinburgh.

    Women didn't often get as involved in the body snatching trade, and so it's quite unusual to find a case where the woman has carried out such a prominent role.
     
    Our story today takes us back to 1829 and to the parish of Lasswade in Midlothian, where  Helen Miller, a lady once married to a body snatcher, turned informant and started offering a helping hand to the body snatchers of Edinburgh.

    Links: 

    • Read more about the story of one of Edinburgh’s most famous body snatchers ‘Merry Andrew’ 
    • Find out about mortstones as a form of body snatching prevention
    • You can also see the story of Helen Miller on my website
    • Discover more stories in Scottish Bodysnatchers: True Accounts by Norman Adams
    • Go exploring with Geoff Holder’s Scottish Bodysnatchers: A Gazetteer

    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at diggingup1800.com

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    11 m
  • 006: Digging Deeper: The World of 19th Century Anatomy: Guest Interview with Cat Irving
    Jun 26 2021

    In this episode I’m joined by Cat Irving, Human Remains Conservator at Surgeons’ Hall Museum in Edinburgh. 

    We step into the world of the 19th-century anatomists and look at how the body snatcher would have delivered a cadaver to the back door of Surgeons’ Hall. 

    We talk about the state of the cadaver after it had been packed into barrels and boxes and there’s also a little bit of dissection talk in there along with some basic anatomy to help set the scene.

    All gruesome stuff, but not too gruesome I hope. 

    01:41 - Introduction 

    03:20 - Famous Surgeons at Edinburgh 

    04:46 - Dissecting Season

    06:30 - The Barber-Surgeons 

    07:46 - Private Anatomy Schools 

    09:26 - Old Surgeons’ Hall & body snatching

    11:03 - The condition of cadavers on arrival

    15:15 - The part where Cat explains decomposition    

    20:40 - Storing Cadavers and using cadavers for dissection    

    24:45 - The wonderful story of Martin Van Butchell

    27:07 - Dissection and The Paris Manner

    34.44 - Finally we get to Burke & Hare 

    37:06 - Those bits of a cadavers anatomists wouldn’t be interested in

    39:22 - What happened to cadavers after being anatomised

    41:22 - Cat’s Blog These Wandering Bones

    44:01 - Thanks & visiting Surgeons’ Hall Museum 


    How To Find My Guest Cat Irving: 

    Cat’s blog These Wandering Bones 

    Twitter @AnatomicalCat

    Facebook @CatIrving

    The link to the image I mention where the cadaver is on the dissecting table holding an open book can be found on the website for the Wellcome Collection I mention in the episode that I thought the image was from Cambridge Anatomy School but in fact, the origin is unknown. 

    You can find up to date visiting information on the Surgeon’s Hall Website if you’d like to go and see the pocket book covered in William Burke’s skin for yourself and also his death/life mask. 

    The story of Martin Van Butchell can be read on the blog of All Things Georgian

    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at diggingup1800.com

    Twitter @Diggingup1800

    Instagram @Diggingup1800

    Facebook @Diggingup1800



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    46 m
  • 005: Eckford Watch Tower & The Tale Of Dandy Jim
    Jun 11 2021

    In This Episode:

    We travel to the Scottish Borders, to a small village called Eckford and hear a short tale from 1829 that inspired the inhabitants of the parish to build a watchtower in the graveyard in an attempt to keep their loved ones safe. 

    If you'd like to see this episode on my blog so that you can read it instead, you can find it on my website
    here 

    Although there are specific books for Eckford, this and other stories can be found in the following books, all of which are great starting points if you're new to this darker side of history. 

    • Norman Adams - Scottish Bodysnatchers
    • Brian Bailey - The Resurrection Men 
    • Martin Fido - Bodysnatchers
    • Geoff Holder - Scottish Bodysnatchers:  A Gazetteer
    • Suzie Lennox - Bodysnatchers: Digging Up The Untold Stories of Britain's Resurrection Men 

    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at diggingup1800.com

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    6 m
  • 004: Making A Killing: How Much Money Did Burke & Hare Make?
    Jun 4 2021

    In This Episode:

    Notorious murderers Burke and Hare made money from their killing spree by selling the bodies of their victims to anatomist Dr Robert Knox. But how much money did they actually make during their ten-month killing period?

    Join me in this episode where I take a closer look at the prices paid for the corpses and tally the final total made by the pair before their murders were discovered just after Halloween 1828.

    Taking Things Further & Recommended Reading


    You can read my blog post that accompanies this episode, Making a Killing: How much money did Burke and Hare Make?  on my website

    If you're interested in reading about the murder of their last victim Mary Docherty you can find my blog post here

    If the London body snatchers are more your thing then why not try my post 'A Week In The Life of A London Body Snatcher' 

    Although there have been many books written on Burke and Hare, the two I mentioned in this episode are:

    • Brian Bailey’s Burke and Hare: The Year of the Ghouls
    • Owen Dudley Edwards: Burke and Hare

     Both are excellent although I found it quite hard to get into Edwards’ book if I’m honest.

    Finally, access to The British Newspaper Archive to look at the trial of Burke and Hare can be reached here, although there is a subscription for this service.

    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at diggingup1800.com

    Twitter
    @Diggingup1800
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    @Diggingup1800
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    @Diggingup1800


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    23 m
  • 003: The Legend Of Half Hangit Maggie Dickson
    May 28 2021

    In This Episode:

    The story of Half Hangit Maggie is legendary in Edinburgh's Grassmarket and is a story universally known about the woman who survived a date with the hangman.

    Having come across Maggie's story many times while researching body snatching, I decided to take in more detail at this remarkable woman and retell her story, one more time.  From her time in Musselburgh when her husband deserted her, to the moment she wakes up in her coffin,  join me as I look again at this legendary figure.

    Taking Things Further & Recommended Reading

    If you’d like to see this episode written in full on my blog post, in all its glory with pictures and full links to other blog posts etc. then you can find it here

    I also mention Burke and Hare's victim Abigail Simpson, and you can read the blog post in full here

    I recently came across Alison Butler's book on Maggie 'The Hanging of Margaret Dickson’ and although I've yet to read it, the author interview carried out by Unearthed Podcast sold it to me and it's on my 'must read' list. it is from this book that I discovered the name of Maggie's husband, Patrick Spence.

    An excellent FREE online resource called ‘Inveresk Parish Lore From Pagan Times’ can help you piece together snippets from this Scottish parish.

    The broadside ‘The Particulars of the Life, Trial, Character and Behaviour of Margaret Dickson’ was published in 1813 and has a few glaringly obvious errors, but can be accessed for FREE on the National Library of Scotland website and the section 'The Word on The Street’.

    If you'd like to look at Margaret's story in the newspapers, it often appears in various different snippets. Access to the newspapers is via the British Newspaper Archive (£) and the account retelling the soldier’s experience at the gallows can be found in The Scots Magazine, Thursday, 1 December 1808, page 25


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    16 m
  • 002 The Hope Street Body Snatching Scandal : Liverpool
    May 14 2021

    In This Episode:

    In 1826 one of the biggest discoveries of cadavers awaiting shipment to the anatomy schools of Scotland was made at George Dock in Liverpool.

    In this episode, I take a look at the case in more detail, from the bodysnatchers involved to the total body count and even the types of barrels used.

    In the years before murderers Burke and Hare and the discovery of the Italian Boy Murderers in London, the discovery of 33 cadavers at George Dock that day in October 1826, would shake the city to its core.


    Taking Things Further... (In Order of  Appearance)

    If you’d like to see this episode written in full on my blog post, in all its glory with pictures and full links to other blog posts etc. then you can find it here

    This is a very famous case for both Liverpool and within body snatching history so it can be relatively easy to find the odd tale or two about this case.

    The best place to look though has to be on the
    British Newspaper Archive website, although you do need a subscription to view the articles themselves.

    Marie McQuade's book '
    School For Scandal'  is in the Liverpool History Society Journal, 5

    Want a mid-week fix of all things body snatching? Then head on over to my blog at
    diggingup1800.com

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    13 m