HAWKINS MURDER
THE SAD TALE OF THE MILLER’S APPRENTICE
From research by Tony Yoward
On 30th of
May 1803, a very valuable freehold estate at
Farlington was for sale. As well as the farm
buildings, 700 acres of land were included and
the proprietor was Mr William HAWKINS. A year
later, the following appeared in the Hampshire
paper -
28/4/1804
TEN GUINEAS REWARD. WHOEVER will restore
CHARLES HAWKINS, son of Mr. William Hawkins,
late of Farlington Farm, near Havant, and an
Apprentice to Mr. John Stoneham, of Portsea,
Miller, to his disconsolate Parent or Master,
will receive the above Reward. He is about 15
years of age, fair complexion, has a scar in his
forehead, light hair, and about 5 feet 4 inches
high. He left Mr. Stoneham ‘s Mill on Thursday
evening last, about 8 o'clock, for the purpose
of waiting on his Father at the Corn Market, at
the Royal Oak, Queen-street, Portsea, but he did
not see him, nor has any tidings whatever been
able to be gained of him since, so that it is
very much feared some melancholy catastrophe has
happened to him. He had on, when he left Mr.
Stoneham's mill, a white round frock and
trowsers. --.Tuesday morning, April 10, 1804.
10/9/1804
PORTSMOUTH, SATURDAY, Sept. 8
Wednesday morning as some men were taking away
a dung-heap at Fratton windmill, they found the
body of a young man named Hawkins, who appeared
to have been murdered and buried there. About
six months ago this young man, who was an
apprentice at the mill, appointed to go and meet
his father, who was coming from Portsmouth
market; but his father staying rather longer
than usual, he did not meet him, but from
that time this young man has been missing.
Enquiry was made on board all the ships in the
harbour and at Spithead, as it was supposed he
had been impressed; the mill-pond was dragged, a
hat being found something like his, but nothing
could be heard of him.
Strong suspicion attached to a man who was a
journeyman at the mill at the time Hawkins was
missed, and who absented himself soon after.
The deceased was son to Mr. Hawkins, a
respectable farmer of Havant. (Hampshire
Chronicle 10th September
1804).
10/9/1804
MURDER.—It may yet be remembered by many of our
readers, that in April last, a reward was
offered to any person who should give
information of Charles Hawkins, who was missed
by his parents on the 5th of that month. Five
months elapsed, without any circumstance
occurring that should tend to explain the fate
of this boy: 'tho slow, yet certain, is that
record of providence; "whosoever spills man's
blood, by man shall his blood be spilt."
The circumstance attending this discovery, with
all its concomitants, are evidently the
direction of an "all seeing Being:"
Hawkins lived with Mr Stoneham, at his mill at
Kingston, near this place, with one Edwards, who
belonged to the Portsea Volunteers, and who,
about a month after the lad was missing,
enlisted at Wickham fair, into the 21st regt. of
dragoons.
Capt. Poulden, to whose company of Volunteers he
belonged, consequently sent to his lodgings for
his regimentals; on his box being examined, a
shirt and several articles were found, belonging
to Hawkins: this may appear as the dawn of
discovery. However, on Edwards receiving his
bounty at Southampton, a person of Portsea, to
whom he was indebted, went to him to make his
demand; and on his taking leave Edwards said,
"he should never return to Kingston again, as
there was some thing there which he knew of, but
which no body else never should know." So far
did he exemplify, that
" With terrors equal, but not with equal guilt, The murderer dreams of all the blood he
spilt."
In this concatenation of circumstances it next
occurred that the labourer hired by Mr.
Stoneham, in the place of Edwards, was a taller
man than Edwards, and was obliged for that
reason from the lowness of the headway from
which he fed the pigs, to reach over, which
induced him to require of his master that the
shed might be made higher; this Mr. Stoneham
refused to do, but desired that he would sink
the ground to lower the tubs, in the digging of
which, was discovered, in a horrible state of
putrescence, the body of Charles Hawkins! The
Coroner (J. Grigg, Esq„) instantly summoned a
jury, and after a long examination, returned a
verdict of—Wilful murder against a person or
·persons unknown. The body was in that
decayed state, that it was only upon the
mother's knowledge of several articles of his
clothes, that It was positively known to be
him. A warrant is issued to apprehend
Edwards, who has deserted from his regiment.
The deceased is the eldest son of Mr. Hawkins, a
wealthy and respectable farmer in this
neighbourhood, who has offered a reward of fifty
guineas, to any person who will give evidence
tending to identify the perpetrator of this foul
murder. The author of the inhuman deed, to
favour the idea of Hawkins having drowned him
self, threw his hat into the Mill-dam at Portsea,
where it was found the day after he was
missing. In the ardent wish and expectation
that the murderer may in part expiate his
offence by the sentence of the laws
10/9/1804
FIFTY GUINEAS REWARD. WHEREAS the BODY of
CHARLES HAWKINS was found the 5th inst. buried,
in a hog-pen, at Fratton, near Portsmouth,
murdered by some Person or Persons, unknown.
Whoever will give Information against the
Offender or Offenders shall, on conviction,
receive the above Reward of Mr. William Hawkins,
Father to the deceased —- East Cosham, near
Portsmouth, the 7th Sept 1804.
17/9/1804
Edwards, the man mentioned In our last as
suspected of the murder of young Hawkins, was
this night brought here and lodged in our jail,
by Mr. Hill and Mr. Stoneham, who had followed
him to Woodbridge barracks, in Suffolk, where
they found him already in custody, upon
information communicated by Gen. Whitelocke.
Edwards is said to state, that an unhappy
scuffle took place between him and the deceased,
in which the latter, by falling from the mill
gallery, or scaffold, broke his neck; that to
conceal his death, he buried the corpse as
before stated; that it was not Hawkins's hat
which was found in the Mill-dam here, for that
he threw down the privy: any comment of ours
would be both improper and indecorous.
24/9/1804
Edwards, is confined in Gosport bridewell, till
his trial comes on, for the
murder of C. Hawkins.
24/9/1804
WINCHESTER THURSDAY William Edwards was
committed to the County gaol, on suspicion of
murdering Charles Hawkins, at Fratton-mill, near
Portsmouth. (Hampshire Chronicle
24th September 1804).
11/3/1805
WINCHESTER LENT ASSIZES. No bills were found
against - - - William Edwards, charged with the
wilful murder of Charles Hawkins. (Hampshire
Chronicle 11th March 1905)..
We do not know the result of the trial, but the
moral seems to be that one should ensure one’s
successor is shorter than you!