St Edmundsbury Borough Council Website



The Red Barn Murder - introduction
 
Red Barn Murder - the sources
 
The facts
 
The people
 
The place
 
Discovery of the murder and Corder's arrest
 
The trial
 
Was William Corder guilty?
 
The execution
 
The exhibits
 
The Red Barn industry
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The Red Barn Murder - introduction

 

Relics at Moyses Hall


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Fact and fiction

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Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn has passed into legend. The story has all the popular elements of melodrama:

  • the wicked squire;
  • the poor;
  • innocent village maiden;
  • sadly wronged;
  • a gypsy curse;
  • her gypsy lover;
  • her child's death (perhaps by poison);
  • her upright, respectable father; and
  • her mother's mysterious dream by which the murder was discovered.

But this tale is more than a legend. Maria Martin was murdered in The Red Barn. Her lover William Corder was arrested for the murder, brought to trial and executed at Bury St Edmunds in August 1828. So much is historical fact, but even before the trial the elements of this sordid country murder were being sensationalized by media hype. As the 19th century progressed new elements were grafted onto the story. Fact and fiction merged into a folk tale which still fascinates today.

These web pages set out to tell that story.