Was Justice Served?
Murder in my family, with David Olusoga
Episode notes
“I have been watching him for 12 years. He has been hiding, but I caught him at last...”
A pre-meditated murder in broad daylight or the tragic result of deteriorating mental health? You decide.
In this special pilot episode of Was Justice Served?, Professor David Olusoga OBE joins co-hosts Jen Baldwin and David Wilson to examine a murder hidden within his family tree. On the 10 September 1896, 64-year-old George Ewart approached 42-year-old Daniel Gray in broad daylight on the corner of Dalton Street in Byker, and shot him at close range with a revolver. Daniel would die that day of his wounds and George - David’s great-great-grandfather - would go on to be tried for his murder. But this case is not as open and shut as it seems, as George’s mental state is at the heart of his defence…
David and the hosts discuss George and Daniel’s lives, families, and the events leading up to that fateful day. They draw on testimonies delivered by family members – people that David’s mother remembers – which were reported in the newspapers at the time as well as medical evidence and witness statements from the trial. They also examine the social and legal context at the time, and the burgeoning understanding of mental health as a factor in major crimes. And, ultimately, David reveals how this terrible tragedy set his family on a trajectory which has lasting impacts to this day.
Discover the details for yourself in the episode's Case Files - a collection of all the key newspaper reports - available to browse for free on Findmypast: www.findmypast.co.uk/wasjusticeserved
Was justice served? Share your judgement with the WJS community:
X - @wasjusticeserved
Instagram - @wasjusticeservedpod
TikTok - @wasjusticeserved
Producer - Madeleine Gilbert
Assistant Producer: Daisy Goddard
AV Editor - Callum Main
Videographer - Angus Webster
Video Lead - Andrew Farrell
Graphics/Design - Kate Benzie, David Bradley and Graham Jacobs
Researcher: Jen Baldwin
Voiceover - Elliot Hardman
AV Lead - Mark Asquith