Notes Parents: William Mintram and Eliza May Rose Veal, married 1886 in Hampshire, England.
William Mintram was born and lived in Southampton until in 1886 he married. By 1902 they had five children and he had gainful employment as a fireman (ie a stoker) with a shipping company, While home on leave one day he stabbed her in the back whereupon she died. He claimed it was an accident.
Article from The Times
Monday November 24, 1902 said he was tried for the wilful murder of his wife at Southampton on October 18, 1902.
The prisoner and his wife did not live happily. At 10:30pm on that day William came home and found his supper prepared for him, the only other person present being his son, William, who gave evidence that the wife Eliza May Rose was sitting in a chair when William came in and slapped her in the face. After a short interval William got up and took a knife and stabbed Eliza in the back, resulting in death. The Jury returned a verdict of manslaughter, and the judge sentenced him to 12 years penal servitude. The judge in this case was Mr Justice Bigham, who later presided over the Titanic enquiry as Lord Mersey, President of the Wreck Commisioner's Court.
Another newspaper reported that a police officer had called at the house half an hour earlier to break up a quarrel between the two as a large crowd had gathered outside the house.
Mintram claimed that the quarrel was over the fact that his wife had pawned his son?s boots to buy drink for herself, and that he had had a bit to drink too when he came home, when she slapped him across the face he stabbed her in the back with a knife, accidentally.
Mintram was found guilty of manslaughter and was sentenced to twelve years penal servitude for manslaughter but served only three.
In 1903, Charles Mintram, 10, arrived at Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, in a group of 57 Barnardo children en route to Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
His father's fate went to become part of history. By 1912 William Mintram was living next door to his eldest daughter who had by then married Walter Hurst, another stoker with the White Star Line. When the Titanic left Southampton, both men were signed up for coal shoveling duties along with Walter's father, who it is said entered the two mens cabin on the fatal evening and threw a lump of ice at the two stokers to wake them up.
As the ship sank, one of the three were able to find either a lifejacket or a lifeboat but when William eventually found just the one lifejacket, he gave it to his son-in-law Walter. They both entered the water five minutes before the ship finally disappeared, finding the collapsible lifeboat B upturned in the water they clung hold.
Only Walter in his lifejacket was finally picked up alive, the body of William Mintram was never found.
On September 22, 1914, at Valcartier, Quebec, Canada, Charles Mintram, 21, enlisted in the Canadian Armed Forces. He declared that he was born in Southampton, England; that his next of kin was his brother, W. Mintram, who resided at Churchlodge, Sussex, England; that his date of birth was May 6, 1893; and that he was not married. He was described as 5 foot 4 inches in height; fair complexion; blue eyes; light brown hair. He was a member of the Church of England.
Contributors Created : 2012-09-15 00:10:34 / From original database Last Updated : 2012-09-15 15:27:55 /
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