On New Year's Day 1960, three men were shot and killed and two wounded in a mass shooting at the East House public house in Sheffield, England. The killer was Mohamed Ismail, a Somali, who had earlier expressed a desire to end his life but thought that suicide was not an option due to his religious beliefs. He committed the shooting in the hope that he would be arrested and sentenced to death by a British court.
East House mass shooting | |
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Location | East House, Sheffield, England |
Coordinates | 53°23′26″N 1°27′32″W / 53.3906°N 1.4588°W |
Date | 1 January 1960 10:45 p.m. (GMT) |
Attack type | Mass shooting |
Weapons | Revolver |
Deaths | 3 |
Injured | 2 |
Perpetrator | Mohamed Ismail |
Motive | Desire to be condemned by British authorities |
Ismail barricaded himself into the pub's toilet and was arrested there by two unarmed police constables, Gilbert Robertson and Denis Hastings. After being remanded in custody, he was determined to be insane and detained at Broadmoor Hospital for 22 months. Ismail was deported to Somalia after his release, and there he went on to shoot a judge before being killed in another mass shooting that killed several people. Robertson and Hastings received no formal recognition in their lifetimes for tackling the gun-wielding killer armed only with their truncheons, but in 2023, their families received bravery awards on their behalf from the South Yorkshire Police Federation.
Shooting
editUnemployed Somali labourer Mohamed Ismail had expressed to a group of women his desire to end his life but that he could not commit suicide due to his religious beliefs.[1][2] He decided to carry out a shooting spree in the hope that he would be sentenced to death by a British court and hanged.[2]
At 10:45 p.m. on New Year's Day 1960, Ismail entered the East House pub on Spital Hill, Sheffield. Owing to the holiday, the pub had been granted an extended licence to remain open past 10.30 p.m., and many revellers were in the smoking room singing Christmas carols around a piano.[3][2] Ismail refused to join in the singing and then pulled out a revolver.[2] Many of those present thought Ismail was playing a joke and raised their hands in mock surrender before he opened fire.[1] Michael MacFarlane was shot in the torso, his brother Donald in the head, Thomas Owen in the eye, George Fred Morris in the back of the head, and Kenneth Ellis in the wrist (the bullet passing straight through his arm to lodge in the wall). Michael MacFarlane died at the scene, and Morris and Owen died after arriving at Sheffield Royal Infirmary.[1][2]
After the shooting, Ismail entered the pub's gentlemen's toilet in the yard and barricaded the door.[4][5] Within minutes of the shooting, Sheffield City Police constables Gilbert Robertson and Denis Hastings arrived on the scene.[1] The officers, armed only with truncheons and handcuffs, had no radio, and their only protection was a woollen tunic. They called for Ismail to come out of the toilets, and when he refused, they kicked the door in.[6] They overwhelmed Ismail and took the revolver, which had a single round remaining, from his hand.[4]
Aftermath
editIsmail appeared at Sheffield Magistrates' Court to face three charges of murder and was remanded into custody. Whilst on remand, a prison medic reported that Ismail claimed to hear voices speaking to him through electricity cables and would smash light bulbs in an attempt to prevent this. He was determined to be insane and was held at Broadmoor Hospital for 22 months.[2] Upon release, Ismail was deported to Somalia. There, he was sentenced to prison after shooting at a judge in his court. After his release in the late 1960s, he "ran amok" and shot and killed several people in a village before dying in a shootout.[2][5][1]
Donald MacFarlane suffered a brain injury that left him in hospital for three years and caused permanent paralysis.[2] The two constables received no formal recognition for their bravery, and both died before their families received bravery awards from the South Yorkshire Police Federation in 2023.[6] The killings remain one of the most deadly crimes in Sheffield's modern history.[1] The East House had ceased to be a pub by 2023.[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f "FLASHBACK: The night three people were shot dead in gun attack on Sheffield pub". The Star (Sheffield). 9 February 2016. Archived from the original on 21 June 2024. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Done-Johnson, Andy (11 June 2020). "How a laborer calmly walked into a Sheffield pub and shot three men dead in cold blood". The Star (Sheffield). Retrieved 21 June 2024.
- ^ "Licensing Act 1921". vLex. Retrieved 15 July 2024.
- ^ a b c Harrison, Harry (1 January 2023). "Brave South Yorkshire Police officers who overwhelmed Sheffield gunman remembered 63 years on". The Star (Sheffield). Archived from the original on 10 March 2023. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ a b Newton, Grace (2 January 2023). "Incredible story of unarmed policemen who tackled gunman after he shot three people dead in Yorkshire pub during New Year's Day singalong in 1960". Yorkshire Post. Archived from the original on 21 June 2024. Retrieved 24 June 2024.
- ^ a b Horrobin, Natalie (26 June 2023). "True crime: Cops honoured for disarming man with gun who killed three in Sheffield pub". The Star (Sheffield). Archived from the original on 21 June 2024. Retrieved 24 June 2024.