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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Jason Evans & Susie Beever

Evil dad killed his daughter after throwing her off a pier and into the sea

A heartless dad shocked the nation when he threw his daughter off a pier and into the sea in chilling murder.

A parent deliberately causing harm or even killing their own child is one of the most abhorrent crimes imaginable.

Evil Thomas Nash, a widower, had remarried just weeks before the heinous crime and failed to tell his new wife about his children.

Instead, he decided to kill his daughter in a crime that gripped the community in 1885.

Up to 4,000 people later gathered outside Swansea prison to see Nash hanged.

The West Pier in Swansea Marina, near where a girl was thrown into the sea by her father in 1885 (South Wales Evening Post)

Many who had gone to watch the execution took to throwing snowballs at the disgraced father.

Little is known about Nash, although documents and newspaper reports from the time revealed he was born and grew up in Pembrokeshire before moving to Swansea as a young man, reports Wales Online.

He would then go on to work various jobs, including as a furnaceman, and marry a woman named Martha with whom he had two daughters, Sarah and Martha Ann.

Documents also show that, tragically, Martha died in the year after giving birth to her second daughter.

The accused, Thomas Nash, was described in court reports as having features 'cast in a dull rather brutal mould' with 'large beetling brows which came out over a pair of small, quickly moving eyes' (Wales Online)

While people who knew Nash reported there was nothing to hint at what would happen at first, he later left his daughters to the care of a landlady.

Nash, 39, apparently promised to return to collect his children, and to settle the outstanding bill for their lodging, but never did.

Unbeknownst to the girls - who were aged in their teens and a toddler at this time - their father had in fact re-married. And forgotten to tell his new wife all about them.

Nash promised he would settle the bill after being confronted by an angry landlady carrying his nearly six-year-old daughter, Martha Ann.

At around 5.15pm that evening a number of pilots and boatmen standing outside the watch-house on Swansea pier saw a man walking hand-in-hand with a little girl onto the pier.

Shortly afterwards the men saw Nash leaving the pier and jumping onto the sand - but Martha Ann was nowhere to be seen.

He was later arrested, where he told police he had put his daughter on the railings in order for her to climb onto his back but she had slipped, and the wind had blown her over the side into the sea.

Officers failed to believe his lies and charged him with murder - as colleagues conducted a search of the pier and foreshore by lantern-light, and within a short time they found Martha Ann's body laying on a pile of rubbish left by the receding tide.

A cell confession written by Thomas Nash in which he admitted murdering his daughter Martha Ann as printed in the South Wales Echo on the day of his execution (Wales Online)

That trial took place in Cardiff Crown Court the following February, with a jury deliberating for just 15 minutes before returning a verdict of guilty.

Newspapers reported how outside the courtroom "the disconsolate daughter of the convict was conducted away in a paroxysm of agonised weeping".

While lawyers argued there had not been enough evidence to convict Nash - even asking Queen Victoria to intervene - attempts at overturning the father's conviction failed. A later confession which emerged however, showed Nash openly admitted to killing his daughter.

(Getty Images/EyeEm)

Reports described how people scrambled outside the town jail to get a good view of the gallows, and by 8am the crowd was estimated as numbering up to 4,000 souls.

The South Wales Echo reported that: "For the most part the crowd was orderly though some roughs indulged in throwing snowballs".

Nash hanged for the crime, before crowds then quickly dispersed.

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