BBC History Magazine

Sex, sadism and sugared death

1 The mother of sex scandals

Adultery accusations made against the prime minister led to a change in Britain's custody laws

In 1827, 19-year-old Caroline Sheridan, granddaughter of the famous playwright Richard Brinsley Sheridan, married George Norton, heir to his family's fortune.

It was a disastrous match. George turned down work while waiting for his inheritance, so the family became dependent on Caroline's earnings as a poet and novelist. George drank and was often violent towards his wife. All the while, Caroline's flamboyance and literary flair was attracting some powerful admirers, including a future prime minister, Lord Melbourne.

In April 1836, after yet another heated argument, George barred Caroline from the family home and prevented her from seeing their three sons, all aged less than seven. In the early 19th century, the law decreed that a wife's property – and any children – belonged to her husband, so there was little Caroline could do about it. Naturally, she was distraught, especially as she knew the pain George was inflicting on her children by “cursing me thro them”, as she wrote to Lord Melbourne.

If that wasn't bad enough, in June 1836 George sued Lord Melbourne for adultery with his wife. A successful prosecution was the necessary first step in divorce proceedings. For George, it was also a money-making venture as he demanded that Lord Melbourne pay him £10,000 in damages.

Salacious testimony

The trial was a sensation. The court was “crowded to excess”, and newspaper readers awaited eagerly the potentially salacious testimony. One maid claimed she “saw Lord Melbourne kiss Mrs Norton”, and another that, after a visit from Lord Melbourne, Caroline's “collar and hair were generally tumbled… She would also wash her hands [and] put fresh rouge on her face.” A coachman's testimony that he saw Caroline lying on the hearthrug with her clothes “up”, showing “the thick part

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC History Magazine

BBC History Magazine4 min read
History Cookbook
ELEANOR BARNETT shares her instructions for making sweet biscuits that were originally baked by 16th-century gentlewomen Jumbles, jemelloe, iombles, jambals: these easy-to-make biscuits are a staple of every Tudor recipe book. The name likely comes f
BBC History Magazine12 min read
The Empire's Last Hurrah?
In the summer of 1924, Scientific American's ‘Special Correspondent in Great Britain’ warned his readers that, “the size and scope of the British Empire Exhibition, like the British empire itself, is almost too big to be grasped”. Within a vast area
BBC History Magazine1 min read
Griffinology
Depicted in everything from medieval coats of arms to modern corporate logos, the griffin has been capturing people's imaginations for more than 5,000 years. Drawing on a wealth of historical sources, AL McClanan's new book examines the origins of th

Related Books & Audiobooks