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Domestic Violence, Gendered Expectations and Respectability in Interwar Britain: Revisiting the 1922 Uxoricide on Brandiforth Street in Bamber Bridge

Taylorian, Brandon Reece orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-2632-5642 (2026) Domestic Violence, Gendered Expectations and Respectability in Interwar Britain: Revisiting the 1922 Uxoricide on Brandiforth Street in Bamber Bridge. Northern History, 63 (1). ISSN 0078-172X

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/0078172X.2026.2687557

Abstract

On a late spring morning in 1922, officials at Strangeways Prison in Manchester hanged a farm labourer, Hiram Thompson, convicted of kicking his wife to death and slitting her throat in their kitchen. Drawing on contemporaneous press reports, this article reconstructs the Bamber Bridge uxoricide as a case study and employs a selective comparison with other domestic homicides to examine how domestic violence was interpreted differently in working- and middle-class contexts in interwar Britain. It argues that the circumstances of the Thompson murder reveal the persistence of Victorian and Edwardian moral codes into the interwar period, and that structural conditions, including economic dependence, legal barriers and social expectations, enabled domestic violence to persist. The article emphasises that press narratives foregrounding alcohol and irregular employment as the catalysts of the murder displaced attention from the prevailing norms of respectability and the ineffectiveness of separation orders in protecting abused wives. With its regional distinctiveness in Lancashire, the Thompson case shows how close-knit, industrial communities interpreted violent behaviour by husbands as an individual aberration from the economic and social order rather than as a product of structurally embedded inequality and gendered power.


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