Charles Peace was an English burglar and murderer, who embarked on a life of crime after being maimed in an industrial accident as a boy.
26 Facts About Charles Peace
Charles Peace was linked to the Sheffield murder, and tried at Leeds Assizes.
Charles Peace's story has inspired many authors and film makers.
Charles Frederick Peace was born on 14 May 1832, in Darnall, Sheffield.
Charles Peace was the youngest son of shoemaker John Peace and his wife Jane, a naval surgeon's daughter.
At age fourteen, Charles Peace was permanently crippled in an accident at a steel-rolling mill.
Charles Peace then began working on the North Eastern Railway, from which he was sacked for absenteeism.
At Whalley Range, Manchester, Charles Peace was seen by two policemen entering the grounds of a house on 1 August 1876, about midnight.
Charles Peace took out his revolver and warned Cock to stand back.
Charles Peace made a point of attending the trial to confirm that he was not a suspect before returning to Darnall.
Dyson took out a summons against Charles Peace, and moved to a different suburb, Banner Cross.
That evening, a little after eight o'clock, Charles Peace observed Mrs Dyson coming out from her back door and entering a nearby outhouse.
Charles Peace fired twice at Dyson, the second shot passing fatally through his temple.
Charles Peace was changing his appearance, concealing his missing finger with a prosthetic arm, and moving around the country to try to avoid detection.
In early 1877, they moved to London, where Charles Peace felt safer from arrest.
Charles Peace sent for his wife and son, Willie, to join him in Peckham.
Charles Peace tried to escape through the garden, and fired four shots at Robinson, who closed on him and managed to hold him, even though a fifth shot had passed through his arm.
Charles Peace was remanded for a week, in which he refused to give his name.
The colleague revealed its author as Charles Peace, writing under his pseudonym John Ward.
From Pentonville prison, where he was serving his sentence, Charles Peace was taken to Sheffield, where he appeared before the stipendiary magistrate at the Town Hall and was charged with the murder of Dyson.
However, the hearing had to be adjourned for a further eight days: on the journey back to Sheffield, Charles Peace jumped from the train near Kiveton Park and was found unconscious beside the track.
However, she admitted that she and Charles Peace had been seen together on various occasions and that her husband had objected to the friendship.
Charles Peace re-asserted that Mrs Dyson had been his mistress, but she strenuously denied this, calling him a demon "beyond the power of even a Shakespeare to paint" who persecuted her with his attentions and, when he found them rejected, devoted all his malignant energies to making the lives of her husband and herself unbearable.
Charles Peace seemed in good spirits, and knelt with them and prayed for half an hour.
Charles Peace then blessed each one singly, and gave way to tears as they left his presence.
Charles Peace was escorted on the death-walk by the prison chaplain, who was reading aloud from The Consolations of Religion about the fires of hell.