4th February 1939
Safe-breaking results in a Jersey arrest
Holiday makers at a Jersey hotel had something to write home about when plain clothes police from Bournemouth swooped on two men eating dinner. A third man made his escape through a window. The men were suspected of – and subsequently charged with – breaking into the Parkstone and Bournemouth Co-operative Society on 4 February and using explosives to blow open the safe. They were wanted in connection with the disappearance of the £476 it contained.
The third man was picked up by Jersey police the following day, but by then the Bournemouth officers had returned to the mainland with the other two men and had to request that the third be sent over.
Evidence is presented
The men appeared in court during the first week of March, when police presented explosives recovered from the scene and sawdust that had been found in their pockets and trouser turn-ups. Perhaps most intriguing, though, were the red rubber bands that had been retrieved from a vacuum cleaner in the hotel where they’d been staying, which matched the ones that had been holding the bundles of missing cash together.
But there were few witnesses. Although neighbours claimed to have heard the explosion and heard a car driving away around an hour later, none had thought to look out and see what was happening – despite the blast being big enough to have broken two windows in the Co-operative office itself.
A wider operation
Eventually, police began to look at similar cases around the country and linked them, and the three men were convicted. Hugh Anson, a 24-year-old waiter, alleged to have been the gang’s driver, was sent to prison for a year. George Darry, who had been arrested with him in Jersey, was sentenced to seven years’ penal servitude. A third man, Leonard Groves, received a three-year sentence, along with Darry, on a separate charge of being in possession of explosives.
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Other events that occured in February
Wartime diplomat Arthur de la Mare is born
- Arthur de la Mare had a long and varied diplomatic career and was appointed High Commissioner of Singapore.
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Fishermen discover an unexpected coffin
- When a paddle steamer was grounded, and sank, some of its cargo was lost, including a coffin and the corpse inside it.
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Lillie Langtry is buried in her parents’ tomb
- Jersey-born Lillie Langtry was a true celebrity, dating royals and starring on the stage, but she never forgot her roots.
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Charles II is declared king in Royal Square
- King Charles II fled to Jersey after the death of Charles I and was declared monarch in the island's Royal Square in 1649.
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