thumb|right|Madeleine Smith

Madeleine Hamilton Smith (29 March 1835 – 12 April 1928) was a Scottish socialite who was accused of murdering her lover with arsenic in a sensational murder trial in Scotland in 1857. Defended by John Inglis, she was not convicted of murder. Her story was dramatised in the 1950 film Madeleine.

Background

thumb|right|The building where Smith and her fiancé Minnoch each had apartments.

thumb|right|upright|L'Angelier's rooming house

Smith was the first child (of five) of an upper-middle-class family in Glasgow; her father, James Smith, was a wealthy architect, and her mother, Elizabeth, was the daughter of leading neo-classical architect David Hamilton. She was born at the family home 81 Wellington Place in Glasgow.

In 1855 the family moved from India Street to 7 Blythswood Square, Glasgow, living in the lower half of a house owned by her maternal uncle, David Hamilton, a yarn merchant. The house stands at the crown of the major development led by William Harley on Blythswood Hill, and they also had a country property, "Rowaleyn", near Helensburgh.

Smith broke the strict Victorian conventions of the time when, as a young woman in early 1855, she began a secret love affair with Pierre Emile L'Angelier, some ten years her senior,

Smith's parents, unaware of the affair with L'Angelier (whom Smith had promised to marry), found a suitable fiancé for her within the Glasgow upper-middle class, William Harper Minnoch. Toxicological evidence, confirming that the victim had died of arsenic poisoning, was given by Andrew Douglas Maclagan.

<blockquote>It was the trial of the century and the newspapers had found a goldmine. Madeleine was pretty, well-connected and young, and the letters that then became the crucial piece of evidence were steamy to say the least.</blockquote>

In the trial the two most positive elements in her defence were the two druggists both testifying that they coloured their arsenic to avoid accident (and the autopsy having not found this), and L'Angelier's valet testifying that L'Angelier had considered suicide at least once. There was therefore a strong suggestion of suicide.

Although the circumstantial evidence pointed towards her guilt (Smith had made purchases of arsenic in the weeks leading up to L'Angelier's death, and had a clear motive) the jury returned one verdict of not guilty on the first count and a verdict of "not proven" on the second count.

<blockquote>"Not Proven" is a verdict unique to Scotland - although it carries an implication of guilt, it acknowledged that Madeleine couldn't be unambiguously convicted.</blockquote>

On 4 July 1861, she married an artist named George Wardle, later, William Morris's business manager. They had one son (Thomas, born 1864) and one daughter (Mary, called "Kitten", born 1863). For a time, she became involved with the Fabian Society in London, and was an enthusiastic organiser. Because she was known by her new married name, not everyone knew who she was, but a few did.

After many years of marriage, she and her husband separated in 1889 and Madeleine moved to New York City. Around 1916, then 75, she married 49-year-old William A. Sheehy and this marriage lasted until his death in 1926.

She was buried in New York at Mount Hope Cemetery in Hastings-on-Hudson on 19 April 1928.

Later theories

Scholars and amateur criminologists have spent decades going over the details of the case. Most modern scholars believe that Smith committed the crime and the only thing that saved her from a guilty verdict and a death sentence was that no eyewitness could prove that Smith and L'Angelier had met in the weeks before his death.

Katharine Cornell portrayed Smith in the play Dishonored Lady. TCM gives the date of the play as 1928; the Internet Broadway Database has it opening on Broadway in 1930. In the early 1930s, MGM starred Joan Crawford, Nils Asther and Robert Montgomery in a film called Letty Lynton, which was based on a 1931 novel of the same title by Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes. This film closely follows Madeleine's story, except that Crawford's character is never charged and, in an example of pre-code Hollywood, gets away with murder. The film was not available due to a suit filed shortly after the film's release in 1932. The suit successfully claimed that the film script bears too close a resemblance to the script of the play, Dishonored Lady. On May 1, 2026, a restored print of Crawford's Letty Lynton will receive its first legal showing in 94 years as part of the 2026 TCM Classic Film Festival. In 1947, the play was adapted into a film of the same name starring Hedy Lamarr.'

The case was again dramatised in 1952 for Mutual Radio in an episode of The Black Museum titled "The Small White Boxes".

Other novels based on the case include The House in Queen Anne's Square (1920) by William Darling Lyell, Lovers All Untrue (1970) by Norah Lofts, and Alas, for Her That Met Me! (1976) by Mary Ann Ashe (pseudonym of Christianna Brand). Alanna Knight's Murder in Paradise (2008) includes Smith, William Morris and George Wardle as peripheral characters, including a story of how Madeleine met George.

From 1976 to 1989 Smith was one of the figures in the Chamber of Horrors section in the Edinburgh Wax Museum on the Royal Mile.

The Madeleine Smith case was documented and partly dramatised, with actors reading her letters and a draft of a letter by Pierre Emile L'Angelier, on an episode of the 2022 BBC Radio podcast series Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley.

A one-act musical based on the Madeleine Smith case, The Glasgow Poisoner, was staged at A Play, A Pie and A Pint (Glasgow) in September 2025 and the play was published by Salamander Street.

References

Sources

  • Campbell, Jimmy Powdrell. Rewriting The Madeleine Smith Story. 2007
  • Diamond, Michael (2003) Victorian Sensation London: Anthem. . pp.&nbsp;172–176
  • MacGowan, Douglas. The Strange Affair of Madeleine Smith: Victorian Scotland's Trial of the Century. (Mercat Press, 2007). .
  • MacGowan, Douglas. Murder in Victorian Scotland: The Trial of Madeleine Smith. (1999)
  • House, Jack (1961) Square Mile of Murder. Edinburgh: W. & R. Chambers
  • Mackay, James. Scotland's Post (2000) Glasgow

Further reading

  • Geary, Rick (2006) "A Treasury of Victorian Murder: The Case of Madeleine Smith". New York: NBM.
  • Gordon, Eleanor & Nair, Gwyneth (2009) Murder and morality in Victorian Britain: The Story of Madeleine Smith. Manchester: Manchester University Press
  • Hartman, M. S. (1979) "Murder for respectability : The case of Madeleine Smith". Victorian Studies, 16:4, 381–400. Publisher: Indiana University Press.
  • Hunt, Peter. The Madeleine Smith Affair. London: Carroll & Nicholson, 1950, with a foreword by William Roughead.
  • Jesse, F. Tennyson. Trial of Madeleine Smith. Edinburgh and London: W. Hodge & Company Ltd., 1927. Notable British Trials series (3rd ed. 1949)
  • Morland, Nigel (US: 1988) "That Nice Miss Smith"

Papers

  • The Madeleine Smith Collection: thirteen letters - Glasgow Libraries, Culture and Sport Glasgow
  • [<!-- https://wellcomecollection.org/works/f8bc2w7u -->https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/pdf/b21078312 PDF]
  • PDF

Websites

  • Magdalene Hamilton Smith as Lena Wardle in later life - Lost Lives: the census of 1881 - Bill Greenwell
  • The Madeleine Smith Story at the Crime Library

Newspaper articles, National Library of New Zealand

  • Contemporary description of the accused; testimony
  • Contemporary description of the accused; correspondence between her and the deceased