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Bavington Hall. Bavington Hall is a 17th-century privately owned country house at Little Bavington in Northumberland.It is a Grade II* listed building. [1]A tower house (Little Bavington Tower) was recorded on the site in 1415, but this was replaced in the late 17th century by the Shafto family.
Sir Cuthbert was divorced by his wife, Mary, in 1797, 'by reason of cruelty and adultery.' [1] Robert Ingram Shafto held Bavington in 1835 but the male line became extinct and the estate passed to cousins in a junior branch of the family of Beamish Hall, Co Durham. When Slingsby Duncombe Shafto sold Beamish in 1949 that branch of the family ...
During a welfare check on January 2, 2023, Pennsylvania state police discovered the bodies of husband and wife Richard and Rita Zajko, age 72 and 69 respectively, at their home in Chester Heights, Pennsylvania. Autopsies found that Rita had a gunshot wound in the back of her head and Richard had wounds in his right hand and temple.
Bavington (anciently "Babington") was the original seat of the prominent Babington family, originally de Babington.Sir John de Babington, Lord of Babington Parva (now Bavington), in the county of Northumberland was alive in 1178 and 1220 and the family remained there for at least five generations before migrating south to Derbyshire, Yorkshire, Nottingham, Cambridge and Devon.
William (1694-1735) left the Urney estate to his wife, Catherine Johnston, who passed her effects to her second husband Colonel John Piggot. [1] Captain Babington's third son, Ralph (died 1764) was High Sheriff of Donegal in 1715 [ 1 ] and lived at Greenfort House in County Donegal . [ 1 ]
Della Faye "Dante" Sutorius [3] (August 8, 1950 – November 20, 2010) [1] [4] was an American woman who was convicted of murdering her husband in 1996. Murder [ edit ]
Mary Beth Harshbarger (born February 19, 1965) is an American woman who rose to media attention when she shot her husband, Mark Harshbarger, during a hunting trip in Newfoundland, Canada, thinking he was a bear. She was charged with "criminal negligence causing death" and found not guilty.
Mary would confess to killing her husband and be charged with first-degree murder after extradition to Tennessee. She was released on bond, and her trial began on April 9, 2007. [5] At trial, Mary claimed that she had suffered extensive physical and emotional abuse at her husband's hands.