Skip to content
The Prosecution Project Logo
Become Involved

Already Registered? Login

  • About
    • The research project
    • The research team
    • The data
    • Citation Guide
  • Search Trials
  • Research Briefs
  • Research Sources
    • Links to our sources
    • History of the Courts
      • Queensland Courts
      • South Australian Courts
      • New South Wales Courts
      • Victorian Courts
      • Tasmanian Courts
      • Western Australian Courts
      • Northern Territory Supreme Court
    • Criminal History Justice Online
  • Publications
  • Project Data
    • The Australian Criminal Justice History Dataverse
    • Tools – Documentation
    • Tools – Access
  • Contact Us
  • Burglars at work

    1877

  • Supreme Court Brisbane 1889

    1889

  • Illegal Immigrant Trial

    1927

  • 1877

  • Historic Photograph of the Entrance to Darlinghurst Gaol

    1887

  • Prosecution Record of Attempted Murder and Suicide

    1877

Home

Search Historic Trials

Do you know your family's past? Search our database of Australian criminal trial records from more than 100 years ago!

More Info

Visualise Trial Statistics

Generate graphs for records via court, offence type, time period and many other filters. View trends and export to image or code.

More Info

Learn how the project collects data

Recent Posts

  • Military Justice

  • Femicide: an intractable history*

  • The day Paul Keating voted for Ronald M’Donald

  • Convict Micro-Histories Reveal Processes of British Colonisation

  • The hanging years

  • Why history shows we need lawyers

  • The pretense of a prosecution?

  • “Mum will be safe now”: Prosecuting children who kill violent men

  • Uncovering a hidden offence: Histories of familial sexual abuse

  • A foreign fighter

On this week in... 1899

Challenge over a woman's honour

On 5 April 1899, Frederick Lewington was tried at the Perth Supreme Court for wounding with intent to do grievous bodily harm to Alexander Johnson. On the day in question Lewington had met Johnson at the house of a mutual acquaintance. Johnson’s wife, Harriet, had also been there. Johnson asked Lewington who had the best right to his wife, to which Lewington replied that Johnson had. Johnson then challenged Lewington to fight. Lewington then stabbed Johnson in the left shoulder with a knife, after which he was hospitalised for fifty-six days. Harriet Johnson testified that she had received money on various occasions from Frederick Lewington to help keep herself and her children. Lewington was sentenced to twelve months hard labour, the judge commenting that such cases of stabbing must be stopped.

This trial report is from The Daily News

Download from Trove

 Last
Next 

Connect With Us

This project is supported by the Australian Research Council, Griffith University and Griffith Centre for Social and Cultural Research.
Permission to use pictorial images on this site has been granted by the relevant agencies.
Theme by SiteOrigin