Why Did People Once Rob Graves for Science? - podcast episode cover

Why Did People Once Rob Graves for Science?

Oct 21, 20185 min
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Episode description

In the United Kingdom in the 1800s, anatomists wanted to study real bodies, but laws and cultural stigma made bodies hard to come by. Learn how the shocking Burke & Hare murder trials changed that in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff from how Stuff Works. Hey, brain Stuff. I'm Lauren Vogelbaum. And of all the possible get rich quick schemes you could involve yourself in, I'm betting you would stop short of serial killing. Yes, even if it meant you'd be aiding the advancement of science. But that's not the case for everybody. Take William Burke and William Hair, too, Irish immigrants who ran a boarding house in Edinburgh, Scotland, and killed at least fifteen people during a ten month

period across eighteen seven and eighty eight. And we're not trying to aggrandize serial murders here, but they made a small fortune doing it. Burke and Hair had no criminal records before they got into the murdering business. Burke was a cobbler and Hair a laborer who owned a lodging house with his wife. When a boarder who owed the Hair's a good deal of background died one day in

November eight seven, Hair complained to his friend Burke. The two decided that the best way to recoup Hair's financial loss was to sell the man's corpse to an anatomy professor at the University of Edinburgh. Anatomy research was a booming business in Edinburgh in the early eighteen hundreds, and though many human dissections were conducted every day in the city,

human remains were hard to come by. Grave robbing was frowned upon, but anatomists were only technically allowed to study the bodies of deceased prisoners, suicide victims, orphans and abandoned children. So Edinburgh's underbelly was crawling with body snatchers. Since the demand was high for cadavers and the supply relatively low, many anatomists used the services of so called resurrection men

to fill their human corps requirements. Resurrection men were folks who made a business of body snatching or clandestinely removing a body from a burial site. There was no law against digging up a dead body and selling it, since the dead didn't officially belong to anyone. Oh what an innocent time, but the general public was perhaps understandably dismayed by this practice. In addition to the living's emotional attachment,

who loved one's remains. At the time, many Christians were concerned that the dissection of bodies after death would prevent the deceased from rising during the final judgment. However, anatomists desperate for cadavers were willing to pay good money for bodies and sometimes in terrible condition, without asking questions about where those bodies came from. A doctor and anatomist named Robert Knox was a popular lecturer at the University of Edinburgh.

When Burke and Hair came to him with that first cadaver from the boarding house, Knox paid them seven pounds ten for the body. In today's money that's almost seven fifty pounds or over nine fifty American dollars, and was almost double with the dead man owed Hair in Backgront. The body was pretty fresh, which pleased Knox, and he was even more pleased a few months later with the body of Burke and Hair's first murder victim. She was a lodger who fell ill with fever in the boarding house.

Perhaps worried that her illness would mean bad business for the boarding house, or perhaps looking to make a quick book the two men suffocated her. Knox paid them ten pounds that's thirteen dollars for that cadaver, worth over a thousand pounds or hundred dollars today. Over the course of the next year, Knox bought a total of sixteen bodies from the pair, mostly women. Most of their victims were killed, likely with the knowledge of the murderer's wives, by applying

them with whiskey and then suffocating them. Burke and Hair preyed on people who were poor and alone or disabled. During the eventual trial, the three victims named in the indictment were a mentally disabled young man, a young woman reputed to be a prostitute, and their final victim, the one who got them caught, a middle aged Irish woman named Margaret Dougherty, reportedly in Edinburgh's searching for her missing son. Burke and Hair were discovered by a couple staying in

Hair's boarding house. They saw the two men drinking with the woman in the evening, and the next morning she had disappeared. They found her body packed in straw under a bed, ready to be taken to Knox. After the couple alerted the police, the authorities rated Knox's cadavers and found the woman's body among them. In the trial, Hair testified against Burke, and he and his wife were released.

Burke's wife was also released, but was executed. Knox was exonerated of all charges because Burke testified that Knox didn't know about the providence of the bodies he was buying. The case was extremely high profile, and, along with other murder cases, including copycat crimes, it led to the passing of the Anatomy Act of eighteen thirty two. This controversial

legislation opened up anatomists options. Any donated body could not be dissected, but with dissections still considered a sort of desecration, the only people who considered such a donation tended to be those in poverty. The Act therefore shifted dissection from being a sort of secondary punishment for criminals after execution to being a sort of punishment for not having the family or funds to provide for yourself after death, and

led to riots at the Cambridge Medical School. Though attitudes and laws have changed since then, the issue of the ownership, transfer and treatment of the dead is definitely still under discussion. Today's episode was written by Jesselyin Shields and produced by Tyler Klang. For more on this and lots of other grave topics, visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com. M

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