Alice Wheeldon: PM plot suffragette mugshot saved from skip sold
- Published
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The ledger containing the image of Alice Wheeldon was nearly thrown in a skip 40 years ago
A police ledger featuring a pacifist convicted of trying to kill a prime minister has been sold for about five times its estimate.
Saved from a skip, the book featured a mugshot of Alice Wheeldon, who was convicted of a conspiracy to kill David Lloyd George in 1917.
A bid to officially clear the name of the Derby-born campaigner for women's rights failed this year.
The ledger was sold for £10,500 at auction in Derbyshire on Wednesday.
'Flabbergasted'
The seller, a 53-year-old engineer from Staffordshire, inherited the book from his father and kept it in a cupboard for decades.
He said he had been "flabbergasted" at the amount the book - which had a guide price of £2,000 to £3,000 - had raised when it sold to a private UK collector.
He said his father, who was a police officer, saved it from being thrown in a skip after a clear-out at a Derby police station 40 years ago.
Derbyshire Record Office had hoped to secure the ledger for public use and launched a fundraising appeal.
However, despite nearly £2,000 of public donations, it was outbid on the day.
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A picture of Alice Wheeldon's daughter Winnie also appears in the book
The seller said: "I suppose it's all down to who has the deepest pockets. I wish the collector well.
"I am very happy with the result. To say I was pleasantly surprised is an understatement. I was flabbergasted. I would have been happy with the original estimate of £2,000-£3,000."
Ms Wheeldon was jailed for 10 years after her conviction, but was discharged months later on the request of Lloyd George himself.
She died in 1919 during the influenza pandemic.
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Alice Wheeldon (right) and daughter Winnie Mason (centre) were convicted while Hettie Wheeldon was cleared
The reliance on evidence from a British spy for the conviction against her has caused controversy since, leading to a campaign to overturn the decision.
The 500-page book - which also includes images of the suffragette's daughter Winnie and son-in-law Alfred Mason, who were convicted alongside her - features black and white photographs of people convicted of a range of offences between 1890 and 1920.
Auctioneer Charles Hanson said: "The fact that it sold for so much underlines its importance as a unique primary historical resource."
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