| Date | Name | City | Province | Licensed | Victims | Deaths | Injuries | Suicide | Firearms | OIC Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1832 | Sovereign | Norfolk County | ON | 8 | 8 | 0 | No | No | No |
Blunt force trauma, knife, axe
Alcoholism, violent.
Classification: Corroborated
Incident Summary:
In 1832, Henry Sovereign, a farmer and shingle weaver, murdered his wife and seven of their eleven children in Norfolk County, ON. He was subsequently tried, convicted, and executed for the crime.
Well-Supported Details:
Unverified or Conflicting Claims:
Source Quality Notes:
+ This source is a reputable news article from The Evening Post, a New York newspaper, dated February 15, 1832.
+ This source is a wiki that has been closed, and its content can be retrieved by downloading current pages or history from the provided links.
+ This source is a webpage that appears to be a summary of a historical event, but its credibility is uncertain due to the lack of a clear source or author.
This wiki has been closed. The content can be retrieved by downloading current pages (XML) or current pages and history (XML) from the provided links. The wiki was closed by Fandom, and if you think it was closed by mistake, you can contact Fandom Support.
Henry Sovereign, a farmer and shingle weaver, lived in Windham Township, Norfolk County, with his wife Polly and their eleven children. In 1832, he killed his wife and seven of their children, and was subsequently hanged for the crime in London. Sovereign was known to drink and was suspected of committing the murders in a drunken rage. He was tried and convicted in August 1832, and executed on August 13, 1832. The case was a landmark one, with the proceedings being written down in the earliest known record of an assize trial in London.
Henry Sovereign murdered his wife and most of his children. The incident occurred in 1832. The source of the information is The Evening Post, a New York newspaper, dated February 15, 1832.