Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

POLICE HELD AT BAY

TWO MEN SHOT IN A VILLAGE. An extraordinary scene in the village of Uley, near Dursley, Gloucestershire, when an old man with _u. double-barrelled gun defied 400 villagers for over an hour, while a dead man’s , body lay at his feet, had a, sequel at Dursley Police Court, when John Dolbear (70) was remanded for a week, accused of murdering William Henry Hill (47), a foreman mechanic and smallholder. Hill was shot dead, and his companion, Charles Pitcher, was wounded.

When the police asked for an immediate remand, Dolbear exclaimed, “Do you want me to say what I did jt for?” “No. Don’t say anything now,” replied the magistrate. The tragedy was first seen by Mrs Hill, wife of the shot man. Her husband and Pitcher had just left the house to do some fencing, when she heard three quick shots. Hill clutched his face and collapsed, while Pitcher staggered into the ditch with a groan: It was more than an hour before the police, by a ruse, were able to recover Hill’s body. AVlien they arrived, they found themselves threatened by the old man with the gun. The police eventually retired to the back of a cottage on the knoll and the crowd kept shouting to the man with the gun while the officers crept foot by foot up tho garden where he stood. Two of them suddenly made a spring, threw the man down, and wrenched away his gun. As he was being taken away by the police the crowd cried. “Kill him!” ami “Lynch, him!” and began to throw stones. The police had to close in to protect him from violence.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19300809.2.17

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 9 August 1930, Page 4

Word Count
278

POLICE HELD AT BAY Greymouth Evening Star, 9 August 1930, Page 4

POLICE HELD AT BAY Greymouth Evening Star, 9 August 1930, Page 4