Case #009 the battersea flat murder

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WHEN AN ACTOR WAS SHOT DEAD BEHIND A LONDON FLAT IN 1910, IT WAS BELIEVED THAT THE CULPRIT WAS A BURGLAR SEEN FLEEING THE SCENE. BUT DID THE VICTIM’S PRIVATE LIFE HAVE ANYTHING TO DO WITH HIS DEMISE?

THE HISTORY DETECTIVE DR NELL DARBY INVESTIGATES COLD CASES FROM THE ARCHIVES

GETTY IMAGES X7, BRITISH NEWSPAPER ARCHIVE X1

Thomas Weldon Anderson was well known to the public as the actor Weldon Atherstone. Born in Liverpool in December 1861, his first mention in theatrical newspaper The Era was in 1886, when he was appearing at Liverpool’s Alexandra Theatre. Two years later, he married Irish actress Monica Kelly, and the couple had four children. He seemed to have a successful, happy life.

As is often the case, though, the reality was somewhat different. Weldon and Monica separated by 1899, and he then started a relationship with a younger American actress, Elizabeth Earle – known as Bessie – and was a regular visitor to her flat, in a terraced house in Battersea. Weldon was arguably obsessed with Bessie, and after a few years, she started to find his jealousies rather wearying. She had retired from acting and started teaching at what would become the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, but he didn’t like her tutoring young men. One evening, Weldon accused Bessie of having had another man staying with her, and then hit her. Later, in 1909, Weldon threatened to cut her throat. He moved out of her flat, but their relationship continued in fits and spurts.

On the evening of Weldon’s murder, his elder son, Thomas Frederick, 21, had gone to Bessie’s about 8.30pm for supper. The jealous Weldon may have suspected that something was going on between his son and his lover, for on that night, he had got into the empty flat below Bessie’s, armed with a cable or cosh, and changed his boots for ‘silent’ carpet slippers. He then made his way to the iron staircase that led from outside the house to Bessie’s first floor flat. It was at the foot of this staircase that he was shot twice at close range, after a “severe struggle”.

TORMENTED BY JEALOUSY

All this emerged at the inquest into Weldon’s death, where, although both Bessie and Thomas were questioned, and Bessie openly admitted to the couple’s issues, there seemed to be no doubts raised about the theory of the ��

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