I was playing armchair detective – then I found out the horrific secret which had haunted my family for decades
WHEN Anna Allan decided to trace her family tree, the last thing she expected to uncover was a shocking family secret.
Days after joining the site Ancestry.com, Anna, from Bridgwater, Somerset, was stunned to discover her aunt, Patricia Cupit, had been murdered on her way to school when she was just six.
What she discovered was that her aunt Patricia Cupit was murdered on the way to school at the age of 6[/caption]After teaming up with a historian who delved deeper into Pat’s case, Anna has uncovered the full story of what happened to her aunt.
Anna, 56, said: “I started looking into my family tree because I didn’t know much about my mum’s side of the family.
“My parents split when I was four and I had limited contact with my mum.
“I was absolutely devastated to find out what happened to my aunt – I cried while reading her story.
“Now, I’m determined to keep her memory alive.”
Anna was soon contacted by another family member, who revealed Anna’s aunt, Patricia Cupit, had been murdered in the 1940s by a soldier.
She googled Pat’s name, and discovered a website dedicated to ‘Little Pat’ – run by local historian Darren Norton.
Darren, from Brandon, Suffolk, had come across Pat’s story, and has spent more than 20 years painstaking researching what really happened.
He said: “I was amazed that I’d never come across the story before and I couldn’t believe it wasn’t better documented.
“My own child was about the same age as Pat, so it really hit home for me.
“The more I found out, the more I was determined to uncover what really happened to Pat.
“It was amazing to hear from Anna and have her help uncovering the story.”
Born in October 1935, Patricia Cupit was doted on by her parents, Leonard, who was in the RAF, and Anne, a housewife, and had a happy life at their home in Mitcham, South West London.
When war broke out in 1939, Pat was evacuated to live with her parents’ friends, Albert and Flo Pask, in the tiny hamlet of Riddlesworth, Norfolk.
Pat was doted on by her mum Anne, a housewife, and had a happy life at their home in Mitcham, South West London[/caption] War broke out and her dad Leonard Cupit was in the RAF, Pat was evacuated to live with her parents’ friends, Albert and Flo Pask[/caption] Anna says it’s important that her aunt’s life is commemorated[/caption]On Tuesday, May 5, 1942, Little Pat was walking the mile from her home to the local school, when she was spotted by Private James Wyeth, working at a nearby army camp.
He had a violent past, with previous convictions for assaulting two women, and was serving a sentence at Borstal when he was recruited for the army.
He had never seen Pat before, but would later tell police he felt compelled to follow her.
When Pat failed to come home from school, her panicked foster parents started frantically searching, before eventually discovering her bloodied body lying underneath a tree.
Police quickly focused on Wyeth as a suspect, after other soldiers said he had disappeared from camp and come back looking flushed and red-faced.
He initially told cops he had taken a detour to collect a newspaper, spoken to a colleague, then read the paper for 30 minutes – but he eventually confessed to stabbing and strangling Pat.
What’s the easiest way to research family history?
How do I research my family tree online?
There are several websites that will guide you through building your family tree.
The biggest in the UK is Ancestry.co.uk, which has 2.4million paying subscribers.
Other services, including genealogy.com, genesreunited.co.uk and findmypast.co.uk, are also available.
How does it work?
You’ll need some basic information to get started including the names, birthplaces and dates of birth for parents and grandparents.
But, quickly sites will begin to help you put the pieces together by searching census, military, parish, passenger and even criminal records.
Ancestry.co.uk highlights records of people likely to be related to you for you check and, if correct, add to your tree.
The information you find is organised on an easy to naviagte family tree – with documents stored to the relevant relative.
Ancestry has more than 18 billion records worldwide, which have helped create more than 80 million family trees.
Wyeth was sentenced to hang for Pat’s murder, although the Home Office later revoked his sentence on the grounds of insanity, and he was sent to Broadmoor secure unit, until his death in 1983.
Although Pat’s parents went on to have another daughter after the war – Anna’s mother – the trauma took its toll on her mother, and she was regularly taken home by police after being found in the middle of the night, wandering the graveyard in her nightdress.
Anna added: “I can see why the family didn’t talk about what happened for so long.
“But now I know about Pat, I think it’s important that we commemorate her life.
“I discovered there was no headstone where she is buried, in Streatham cemetery, so I arranged for one to be put in this summer.
Anna and Darren now plan to hold a small commemoration for Pat at the cemetery in October this year, on what would have been Pat’s 90th birthday.
Anna said: “In a way, I owe my life to Pat’s death. If she hadn’t been murdered, her parents probably wouldn’t have had another child and I probably would have never been born.
“That makes it even more important to me that she is never forgotten.”
Anna arranged for Pat to finally get her headstone[/caption] Local historian Darren Norton runs a website in memory of Pat[/caption]