The Industrial Graves
JamesGraywick
あらすじ
How Britain's Post-Industrial Landscape Became a Geography of Murder When Britain's mills fell silent and shipyards closed, entire cities were left hollowed out. In the shadows of abandoned factories, neglected housing, and fractured communities, serious crime found space to grow. The Industrial Graves is a rigorously researched work of narrative true crime and social history examining how deindustrialisation reshaped Britain's urban geography-and how that geography enabled some of the country's most notorious murders. Between the 1970s and the 2010s, economic collapse transformed textile towns, shipyard districts, and docklands into landscapes of vulnerability: places where policing failed, transient populations multiplied, and solid Victorian architecture concealed crimes for years. This book argues that place mattered as much as motive. Through detailed case studies and geographic analysis, The Industrial Graves explores ten major crimes, including: The Yorkshire Ripper - Peter Sutcliffe exploiting West Yorkshire's declining industrial districts and fractured night-time economies Fred and Rose West - how neglected housing stock and urban isolation enabled long-term concealment at 25 Cromwell Street The Glasgow Ice Cream Wars - post-shipyard gang economies, wrongful conviction, and Scotland's worst miscarriage of justice The Crossbow Cannibal - murder inside a converted Bradford textile mill amid urban decay Salford's contract killing underworld - violence operating alongside high-profile urban regeneration Additional cases span England, Scotland, and Wales, revealing how industrial decline altered patterns of crime, investigation, and justice. This is not a book about glorifying killers. It is a forensic examination of how economic geography determines who is vulnerable, where violence can hide, and why justice sometimes arrives too late. Based on court transcripts, forensic evidence, and official archives. Written with respect for victims and families. Essential reading for fans of serious true crime, criminology, British social history, and urban studies.