Thomas Cameron Close of Middlesbrough
No hiding place in 1876 - even in Australia!
Thomas Cameron Close
was the Borough Accountant
for Middlesbrough Borough Council
during the 1860s and early 1870s. He was married, and had 5 children
born between 1862 and
1872. A number of discrepancies in the accounts were identified in December 1875, and Close was suspended
from his duties. A London firm of accountants was called in, and they found evidence of false accounting,
fraud and forgery, concluding that a total of £2,403 18s 9d was missing.
Pursued by a dedicated police officer
In early January 1876 it was reported that Close had 'disappeared',
and enquiries established that he and his family had sailed from the Thames in the Highflyer, a sailing ship bound
for Australia. The Middlesbrough police were alerted, and Sgt. William Ashe (who was married, with two young daughters)
was despatched by the Suez mail steamer in mid-February with an arrest warrant. Being
on a much faster vessel, Sgt. Ashe had hoped to reach Melbourne before Close. However, a smallpox outbreak
on board caused a 10-day delay at Point de Galle (modern-day Sri Lanka).
The
Melbourne police had been alerted by telegraph to look out for Close
and his family,
and they were easily identified,
even though they were travelling under the name of Gascoigne. Two
detectives
were assigned to 'shepherd' Close
until Sgt. Ashe arrived with the arrest warrant, which they successfully
did without
arousing his suspicions.
Melbourne: arrest of Close, generosity to the family
Sgt. Ashe found Thomas Cameron Close standing on Sandridge Pier,
and although he at first insisted
his name was Gascoigne, he
subsequently admitted he was the former Borough Accountant of
Middlesbrough and was jailed
pending the issue of the governor's extradition order. Thomas
Cameron Close's
wife Jane, two sons and three
daughters were left to fend for themselves in Melbourne, and the Argus
printed an appeal
for funds to pay their fares back to England on the Hampshire - the ship in which the arrested embezzler
was due to travel back with the intrepid Sgt. Ashe. Over £134 was raised, and the grateful Close
family was able to return to England, landing in Gravesend on 11 August 1876. In all, Sgt. Ashe was away from his wife and family for five months on this assignment - now that's real dedication to duty!
Brought to justice
The progress of the Hampshire
and the ultimate return of the prisoner to Middlesbrough was reported
in great
detail in the British press, as was
Close's trial for embezzlement and forgery in December 1876, and its
eventual outcome
- a guilty verdict reached by the jury in just 5 minutes. Thomas Cameron Close was sentenced
to five years' penal servitude.
Following
Thomas Cameron Close's release from prison, he appeared with his wife
and family once again in the 1881
census, and in the first quarter of 1882 his 6th and last daughter was
born.
In both 1881 and 1891 he was still living in Middlesbrough
and still described his occupation as 'accountant'
- yet one has to wonder who would be
willing to entrust their financial affairs into his hands after the
events of 1875/6,
which were undoubtedly common
knowledge throughout the town.
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