Manchester Murders: A True Crime Podcast

Episode 28: Isabella Skelton

19 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 28: Isabella Skelton

Descripción

On the morning of Friday the 6th of June 1969, thirty-five-year-old Isabella Skelton left her home on Lidiard Street in Crumpsall, Manchester, and was never seen again. Her husband told their children she had gone away for work. One of her sons was in hospital with a broken leg. Her daughter's fifteenth birthday was a fortnight away. Nobody reported her missing for fifty years. Isabella was a Glasgow-born typist - petite, dark-haired, known as Izzy - who had moved to Manchester in the early 1960s with her husband Lewis and their three children. What her daughter Lynda remembers of her is small but specific: a trip to C&A to buy a dress for the Whit Walks. A mother who looked after the family. A woman whose world, outside the home, was narrow. In 2019, Lynda walked into a police station and reported her mother missing. Greater Manchester Police launched an investigation and reclassified the case as murder. They excavated the family's former home for twelve weeks. They found nothing. One man was interviewed under caution. No charges were brought. In 2024, Isabella's husband Lewis Skelton - by then ninety-one - was jailed for four years for historic child cruelty offences committed in the 1970s and 1980s. He has never spoken publicly about his wife's disappearance. The murder investigation remains open. This episode tells the story of a woman known almost entirely through her absence - and of a daughter who has spent more than fifty years refusing to stop looking.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Manchester Murders: A True Crime Podcast!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

33 episodios

episode Ep 31: First and Last Part 1: Michael Johnson artwork

Ep 31: First and Last Part 1: Michael Johnson

The first in a short series on Strangeways Prison and the people who were first and last to be executed there. On Christmas night, 1868, in a crowded Salford beerhouse, a fiddler named Patrick Nurney tried to talk a drunk young man into going home - and was stabbed to death for it. His killer, twenty-year-old Michael James Johnson, would become the first person ever hanged at the newly built Strangeways, on a scaffold carried over from the old New Bailey, by an ageing executioner whose failures were already notorious. This is the story of that Christmas night, of the trial and the hanging that followed, and of the widow and the daughter the newspapers never thought to ask about - told, as ever, with the victim at its centre.

26 de jun de 202627 min
episode Ep 29: The 1996 Manchester Bomb artwork

Ep 29: The 1996 Manchester Bomb

On 15 June 1996, the IRA detonated a 1,500kg lorry bomb on Corporation Street in Manchester city centre. It was the largest bomb detonated on British soil since the Second World War. Two hundred and twelve people were injured. No one died. No one has ever been convicted. In this episode, Susan tells the story of the bombing and its aftermath: the ninety-minute evacuation that saved hundreds of lives, the investigation that was quietly shelved, the leaked documents that led to the arrest of a detective and a journalist, and the question of what the rebuilding of the city centre really tells us about modern Manchester. Manchester Murders is a narrative true crime podcast covering murder and related cases connected to Greater Manchester. New episodes every Friday. manchestermurders.com

12 de jun de 202624 min
episode Episode 28: Isabella Skelton artwork

Episode 28: Isabella Skelton

On the morning of Friday the 6th of June 1969, thirty-five-year-old Isabella Skelton left her home on Lidiard Street in Crumpsall, Manchester, and was never seen again. Her husband told their children she had gone away for work. One of her sons was in hospital with a broken leg. Her daughter's fifteenth birthday was a fortnight away. Nobody reported her missing for fifty years. Isabella was a Glasgow-born typist - petite, dark-haired, known as Izzy - who had moved to Manchester in the early 1960s with her husband Lewis and their three children. What her daughter Lynda remembers of her is small but specific: a trip to C&A to buy a dress for the Whit Walks. A mother who looked after the family. A woman whose world, outside the home, was narrow. In 2019, Lynda walked into a police station and reported her mother missing. Greater Manchester Police launched an investigation and reclassified the case as murder. They excavated the family's former home for twelve weeks. They found nothing. One man was interviewed under caution. No charges were brought. In 2024, Isabella's husband Lewis Skelton - by then ninety-one - was jailed for four years for historic child cruelty offences committed in the 1970s and 1980s. He has never spoken publicly about his wife's disappearance. The murder investigation remains open. This episode tells the story of a woman known almost entirely through her absence - and of a daughter who has spent more than fifty years refusing to stop looking.

5 de jun de 202619 min
episode Episode 27: Mohanad Goobe artwork

Episode 27: Mohanad Goobe

On the afternoon of Monday the 15th of September 2025, fifteen-year-old Mohanad Abdullaahi Goobe was stabbed to death on a street in Moss Side, Manchester. He had left Whitworth Park with two friends, believing a confrontation was over. It had only just begun. Mohanad was the youngest of three children - funny, loyal, loved. His death came at the end of an escalating conflict that began with an argument on TikTok, moved through a series of arranged fights in public parks, and ended with a planned ambush carried out by a group of more than twenty boys, some of them still in school uniform. Three teenagers were convicted following a trial at Bolton Crown Court in April 2026. Two were found guilty of murder. One was found guilty of manslaughter. All three were juveniles and could not be named. This episode tells the story of who Mohanad was, how the conflict developed, and what the evidence presented at trial and sentencing reveals about the forces of social media, wounded pride, the easy availability of knives - that converged on an ordinary Monday afternoon to take his life. It also carries the words of his mother, Amaley, who stood in court and asked the question that his death demands: why has it become normal for children to carry knives?

29 de may de 202618 min