Sir Theodosius Edward Allesley Boughton (August 1760 – 29 August 1780) was a British aristocrat who was the 7th Boughton baronet of Lawford. Boughton was poisoned by his brother-in-law in what became a famous murder case in the United Kingdom.[1]
Life
editBoughton attended Rugby School from the age of seven, which was four miles from his home. In 1772 when he was 12, his father Edward Boughton died suddenly at the age of 53, meaning Theodosius would inherit his estate when he reached the age of 21 (which he never did). In 1775, at age 15 he was sent away to Eton College in Berkshire, where by 1777 he had contracted venerial disease (likely syphilis) which left him in a poor state of health, soon afterwards he was brought home by his mother.[2]
In 1780, Boughton was living at his ancestral family home of Lawford Hall, Little Lawford, near Rugby with his mother Lady Anne Maria Boughton, older sister Theodosia, and brother-in-law, Captain John Donellan. Donellan (born 1737) was known as "Diamond" Donellan because of a large diamond he had brought back to England from India.[3]
Death
editBoughton was under the care of Mr Powell, a local apothecary based in Rugby, for his poor health. Powell, had made up a purgative draught for Boughton, which consisted of fifteen grains each of jalap and rhubarb, and twenty drops of lavender water, mixed with two drams each of syrup and nutmeg water, and an ounce and a half of plain water. The draught was delivered to Lawford Hall by a servant on 29 August 1780, and the servant insisted that it had been delivered to Theodosius directly.[4]
Later that night, while he had just turned 20, his mother stood by his bed and insisted that he drink the draught that the apothecary had prepared; he said it tasted bad, but drank it anyway with a piece of cheese. Within minutes of drinking it Boughton started heaving and groaning, and frothing at the mouth, and died soon afterwards.[4]
Following his funeral, his remains were buried at St Botolph's Church at nearby Newbold-on-Avon.[4]
Aftermath
editAfter Boughton's funeral, suspicions arose as to the cause of his death, and suspicion soon fell on Donellan who would stand to gain if Theodosius died before 21, as the estate would go to his sister. The body was exhumed and examined. A Coroner's inquest ruled that Boughton's cause of death was poisoning and returned a verdict of murder against Donellan. Despite the preponderance of circumstantial evidence, and Donellan's claims of innocence, he was convicted, condemned and executed on 2 April 1781.[5]
Boughton's widowed sister subsequently married Sir Egerton Leigh Bt, 2nd Baronet (1762-1818).[6][7][8]
The title was inherited by a half cousin, (grandson of the 4th Baronet by his second wife Catherine [9]), Sir Edward Boughton, 8th Baronet, who sold Lawford Hall (later demolished) and the Warwickshire estate in 1793.[10]
References
edit- ^ Bevan, G. Phillips (1882). Tourist's Guide to Warwickshire. London: Edward Standford. ISBN 0554808021.
- ^ Cooke 2011, pp. 41–45.
- ^ Cooke 2011.
- ^ a b c Cooke 2011, pp. 1–10.
- ^ John Donellan, Esq; http://www.exclassics.com/newgate/ng359.htm
- ^ Burke's Peerage
- ^ Peter Burke (1849), Celebrated Trials Connected with the Aristocracy in the Relations of Private Life. William Benning
- ^ Cooke 2011, pp. 227–229.
- ^ Cooke 2011, p. 87.
- ^ Cooke 2011, pp. 224–225.
Bibliography
edit- Cooke, Elizabeth (2011). The damnation of John Donellan :a mysterious case of death and scandal in Georgian England. Profile. ISBN 9781846684821.
Further reading
edit- Rugby:past and present, with an historical account of neighbouring parishes. Rev W.O. Waite (1893) - contains a lengthy description of the case between pages 241 (219) & 255 (233).