MAN SET ON FIRE
EXTRAORDINARY SUICIDE DEATH IN CEMETERY “I saw a man lying naked on the ground. His body was on fire. We put the flames out and asked him what he had done. He replied: T have set myself on fire with paraffin. Hit me on the head, lads; put me out of misery.’ ” This remarkable statement was made by John Johnson, of Edward Street, Hanley, at the inquest at Stoke-on-Trent on William Henry Tope (56), a labourer, of Peace Street, Hanley, who set fire to himself in the Hanley Cemetery and died later from his burns. A verdict of suicide while of unsound mind was returned. Mr. Johnson told the coroner that he was in the road by the cemetery when he heard women screaming. He ran along with another man, named Bertie Emery, and asked two women what was. the matter. "They said there was a man on fire i in the cemetery.” added Johnson, “so \ we jumped over the railings arid saw I Pope there.” They sent for the police ambulance and covered the injured ] man with an overcoat. Emery stated that practically all Pope's clothing was burned off, and ! he appeared to be in terrible pain. A police constable said that Pope had apparently climbed the wall of the cemetery, gone into one of the | buildings, taken off part of his clotli'ug, poured a quantity of paraffin over the rest of h’s clothes and set fire to himself. On the way to hospital, in the J Police ambulance, the constable asked him why be had done such a ! foolish thing, and Pope replied: ‘‘l ) am in trouble and in poverty, and I j wanted to die.” Mrs. Pope said her husband had been unwell and depressed for a week before his death, and had been much upset by the fact that on the day before his death he was charged at the Hanley Police Court with breaking a sh ip window, w hen he was bound over. He was badly wounded in the head at Gallipoli, and had never been the same since.
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 916, 8 March 1930, Page 23
Word Count
349MAN SET ON FIRE Sun (Auckland), Volume III, Issue 916, 8 March 1930, Page 23
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