OSCAR WILDE DEFENDS HIMSELF AT THE OLD BAILEY. CHARGES BROUGHT AGAINST HIM BY LORD QUEENSBERRY. |
1895-04-03 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
55 |
4192 |
OSCAR WILDE, CROSS-EXAMINED BY MR. CARSON, INDIGNANTLY DENIES LORD QUEENSBERRY'S CHARGES. |
1895-04-04 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
60 |
4217 |
NOT GUILTY. SENSATIONAL END OF THE WILDE LIBEL. QUEENSBERRY'S WORDS FOUND FULLY JUSTIFIED.
M. Clarke Withdraws from the Case After Consultation with Oscar who Does Not Appear in the Final Scene. |
1895-04-05 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
20 |
1932 |
OSCAR WILDE CHARGED THIS MORNING AT BOW-ST. TAYLOR IS PLACED BY OSCAR'S SIDE IN THE DOCK |
1895-04-06 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
29 |
2165 |
OSCAR WILDE IN PRISON Eats Little and Sleeps Less in Spite of A Doctor's Draught. |
1895-04-08 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
1 |
632 |
OSCAR WILDE BROUGHT UP AT BOW-ST THIS MORNING. Sir Edward Clarke Again Takes Up Wilde's Case, But
Declines to Cross- examine the Witnesses Already Called. |
1895-04-11 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
27 |
1936 |
SPECIAL EDITION WILDE CASE. PRISONERS COMMITTED FOR TRIAL AT THE OLD BAILEY. The Two Parkers Give
More Evidence, and Sir John Bridge, after Studying Depositions at the Queensberry Trial, Refuses to Admit Wilde and Taylor to
Bail. |
1895-04-19 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
25 |
1856 |
London Star - Friday, April 19, 1895 |
1895-04-19 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
584 |
OSCAR WILDE. TWO VIEWS OF HIS PRESENT POSITION. Has he been Unfairly or Prematurely Judged by
Magistrate and Public, or does His Case Illustrate the Need of Prison Reform? |
1895-04-22 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
704 |
OSCAR WILDE. LORD ALFRED DOUGLAS APPEALS FOR FAIR PLAY. SIR JOHN BRIDGE IS ACCUSED OF "FLAGRANT
PREJUDICE." Lord Queensberry's "Precious Bit of Cant and Bad Grammar" Do Not Alienate the Sympathy of Mr. Robert Buchanan, Who
Only Wants to See "Queensberry Rules" Observed in the Trial. |
1895-04-22 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
6 |
629 |
SPECIAL EDITION. WILDE CASE. A STARTLING RUMOR DENIED Mr. Wilde's Solicitors Say he will Plead
Not Guilty, and Will Fight the Case to the End. |
1895-04-23 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
8 |
615 |
OSCAR WILDE. MR. BUCHANAN PLEADS FOR A BROTHER ARTIST. And Says That Wilde Has Already Lost Everything That
Can Make Life Toler- able--Another Correspondant Holds Different Views of "Christian Charity." |
1895-04-23 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
911 |
WILDE CASE. MR. CHARLES MATHEWS APPLIES FOR POSTPONEMENT. >Mr. Wilde's Solicitor is of Opinion that
in the Present State of Public Feeling it would be Difficult to have an Impartial Trial--Case will be Tried on Friday. |
1895-04-24 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
720 |
OSCAR WILDE. MR. BUCHANAN REPLIES TO AN "ANONYMOUS COWARD." And Says That He "Heard From the
Marquess of Queensberry's Own Lips That he Would Gladly Set the Public an Example of Sympathy and Mag- nanimity." |
1895-04-24 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
650 |
OSCAR WILDE. Lord Queensberry Defines His "Sym- pathy" for the Dramatist. TO THE EDITOR OF "THE STAR." |
1895-04-25 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
2 |
747 |
OSCAR WILDE. LAST SCENE OF THE SENSA- TIONAL TRIAL. The Prosecution Put Forward Twenty- five
Counts in Their Indictment, and Sir Edward Clarke Objects to Wilde Being Asked to Plead. |
1895-04-26 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
8 |
1793 |
OSCAR WILDE. SECOND SCENE OF THE LAST PHASE OF THE TRIAL. Sir Edward Clarke Puts Wood Through a
Severe Cross-Examination, During Which He Makes Damaging Admis- sions. |
1895-04-27 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
16 |
1576 |
OSCAR WILDE. MORE WITNESSES ARE CALLED FOR THE PROSECUTION. Nothing New, However, is Brought Out
in Evidence, which Relates to Wilde's Stay at the Savoy Hotel and Taylor's Arrest. |
1895-04-29 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
18 |
1362 |
OSCAR WILDE. |
1895-04-30 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
25 |
3183 |
WILDE. IMPRESSIVE SUMMING UP BY MR. JUSTICE CHARLES. HE CAN SEE NOTHING IMMORAL IN "DORIAN GRAY," OR IN
WILDE'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE "CHAMELEON," BUT IS OF OPINION THAT THERE IS LEGAL CORROBORATION OF THE EVIDENCE OF THE PRINCIPAL WITNESSES. |
1895-05-01 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
4018 |
BAIL FOR OSCAR WILDE An Application to be Made to Baron Pollock in Chambers |
1895-05-02 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
1 |
74 |
BAIL FOR OSCAR WILDE Two Sureties of £1,250 Each and Personal Recognisance £2,500. |
1895-05-04 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
1 |
141 |
QUEENSBERRY VISITS HOLLOWAY |
1895-05-06 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
2 |
97 |
SURETIES FOR OSCAR WILDE |
1895-05-06 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
33 |
WILDE RELEASED. MR. VAUGHAN ACCEPTS BAIL THIS MORNING. Lord Douglas of Hawick and the Rev. Stewart Headlam
Became Bail for Wilde--Mr. Headlam Wants Wilde to Have a Fair Trial. |
1895-05-07 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
13 |
618 |
WILDE CASE REOPENED TO-DAY AT THE OLD BAILEY WILDE AND TAYLOR TO BE TRIED SEPARATELY. The
Solicitor-General Opens in Person the Case for the Prosecution -- Wilde to be Released on the Old Bail -- Application for the
Postponement of his Trial to the Next Sessions |
1895-05-20 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
5 |
2139 |
THE WILDE SCANDAL TAYLOR CROSS-EXAMINED BY SIR FRANK LOCKWOOD Little Prospect of an Early Finish of
the Trial, which will Probably Last the Afternoon Through |
1895-05-21 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
13 |
2560 |
QUEENSBERRY. APPEARS WITH HIS SON AT MARLBOROUGH-ST. THE TELEGRAM AND LETTERS WHICH LED TO THE
FIGHT. The Two Sides of the Story are Told, and an Odd Telegram Sent by the Marquess is Read--Father and Son Bound Over in a Big
Sum to Keep the Peace. |
1895-05-22 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
17 |
1308 |
WILDE AGAIN IN THE DOCK AT THE OLD BAILEY. SOME SELF REVELATION BY SHELLEY. He Says Wilde
"Entrapped Him," but Afterwards Seemed Sincerely Sorry-- Peculiarities of "An Artist's" Temperament in a New Series of Letters. |
1895-05-22 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
33 |
2530 |
WILDE, WEAK, ILL, AND UTTERLY DEJECTED IN THE DOCK. WITNESSES EXAMINED FOR CORROBORATION.
The Elder Parker and the Hotel Servants Go Over the Old Story--A Smart Bit of Cross-examination by Sir Edward Clarke. |
1895-05-23 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
34 |
1724 |
WILDE, CROSS-EXAMINED FOR THE THIRD TIME, ADMITS THAT HE WAS ENORMOUSLY FOND OF PRAISE.
Strong Remarks on Sir Frank Lockwood's Conduct of the Case for the Crown, which, Sir Edward Clarke Says, is Contrary to the Usual
Practice of the Courts and to the Rules of Common Fairness. |
1895-05-24 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
81 |
3260 |
WILDE TRIAL. FIERCE COMBAT BETWEEN COUNSEL. LOCKWOOD HOTLY RETORTS ON SIR EDWARD CLARKE.
JURY ASK ABOUT A. DOUGLAS. Passionate Outbursts which Distress the Judge, who Threatens to Clear the Court of Morbid
Curiositymongers who Laugh. |
1895-05-25 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
37 |
2628 |
WILDE. LAST TERRIBLE SCENE OF THE GREAT TRIAL. SCATHING SPEECH BT THE JUDGE IN PASSING
SENTENCE. Received With Cries of "Shame" From the Public Gallery as Oscar Wilde, Utterly Unnerved and Cast Down, was Led to the
Cells. |
1895-05-27 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
1717 |
WILDE. SOME OF THE MYSTERIES OF THE CASE. A List of Blanks Which Were Left Unfilled at the First Two
Trials. |
1895-05-28 |
Britain |
London |
English |
1 |
19 |
630 |
THE WILDE SCANDAL. Mr. Labouchere Writes Very Plainly About it. |
1895-05-29 |
Britain |
London |
English |
0 |
0 |
328 |