BTP History Week.



It was a warm September night in 1895 when Detective Sergeant Robert Kidd of the London and North Western Railway Police, a father of seven children all under the age of 12, attended Wigan station following a recent spate of thefts from goods wagons.

Kidd, a former officer with the Manchester City Police Force, was an ambitious 37 year old who, after climbing up through the ranks, had been posted to Manchester (Liverpool Road Goods).That night he had been sent to Wigan to assist his colleague Detective Constable William Osbourne to catch those responsible for the thefts.

As the pair patrolled the railway sidings they saw a man, William Halliwell, crouched in the shadows behaving suspiciously. As they approached, he ran off and DC Osbourne gave chase, eventually catching him.
A struggle ensued and, as DC Osbourne restrained him, a second man, William Kearsley, appeared. Concerned for his safety, DC Osbourne drew his truncheon. But anotherman, Elijah Winstanley, approached with a knife. The three men escaped, leaving Osbourne injured.
He staggered to the sidings where he found DS Kidd lying on the ground with nine knife wounds to his face and neck.
He attempted to carry his fallen colleague but collapsed unconscious by his side after raising the alarm from a nearby signal box.

DS Kidd died at the station. When details of his horrific injuries became public, information flooded in, leading to the arrest of the three men.
Halliwell, who faced a charge of unlawful wounding, agreed to give evidence against the other two.

While the three awaited trial, a workman playing cards in a field between the LNWR and the London and Yorkshire railway found a penknife that, when examined by police, turned out to be the knife used to kill DS Kidd. A notch in the blade was consistent with the horrific injuries he sustained.

The jury at the trial, held at Liverpool Assizes, returned a guilty verdict without even leaving the court.
The charge against Halliwell, who had turned Queen’s evidence, was discharged due to lack of evidence.
Kearsley and Winstanley were sentenced to death. Following appeal, Kearsley had his sentence reduced to 20 years in jail. Winstanley was later hanged.

DS Kidd’s grieving widow was left with seven children and no means of support. The Mayor of Salford opened an appeal fund which received generous donations to help her provide for the bereaved children.