Arthur Orton

Deceased Person

1834 – 1898

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Who was Arthur Orton?

Arthur Orton, the son of a London butcher, went to sea as a boy, spent a year in Chile, and worked as a butcher and stockman for squatters in Australia in the middle-to-late 1850s. He has generally been identified by legal historians and commentators as the "Tichborne Claimant", who in two celebrated court cases both fascinated and shocked Victorian society in the 1860s and 1870s.

In 1866 Thomas Castro, a butcher from Wagga Wagga in Australia, claimed to be Roger Tichborne, the heir to the Tichborne estates and baronetcy who had been declared lost at sea in 1854. During the protracted court proceedings that followed Castro's claim, evidence was produced that Castro might in fact be Arthur Orton, attempting to secure the Tichborne fortunes by imposture. The verdict of the jury in Regina versus Castro was that Castro was not Roger Tichborne, and that he was Arthur Orton. He was sentenced to fourteen years imprisonment for perjury. After his release he lived in great poverty, still insisting that he was Tichborne. In 1895 he confessed to being Orton, but retracted almost immediately.

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Born
Mar 20, 1834
Wapping
Also known as
  • Thomas Castro
  • Tichborne Claimant
Nationality
  • England
Lived in
  • Melipilla
    (1849/06 - 1851)
  • Hobart
    (1853/05 - )
Died
Apr 1, 1898

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

Citation

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