Montagu Stephen WilliamsQ.C. (30 September 1835 – 23 December 1892) was an English teacher, British Army officer, actor, playwright, barrister and magistrate.
His clients included Catherine Wilson, whom he defended twice on murder charges; George Henry Lamson, hanged in 1882 for poisoning his brother-in-law;[3]Percy Lefroy Mapleton, the "railway murderer", hanged in 1881;[3] John Young, acquitted of manslaughter after his opponent in a boxing match died, establishing a legal precedent.[4]
^ ab"The case of the late Mr Montague Williams". British Medical Journal: 1440. 31 December 1892.
^ abHorace Bleackley (1929). The hangmen of England: how they hanged and whom they hanged : the life story of "Jack Ketch" through two centuries. Taylor & Francis. p. 245. ISBN0-7158-1184-3.
^Thomas A. Green; Joseph R. Svinth, eds. (2010). Martial Arts of the World: An Encyclopedia of History and Innovation. ABC-CLIO. p. 465. ISBN978-1-59884-243-2.
Hugh H. L. Bellot (2005). The Inner And Middle Temple: Legal, Literary And Historic Associations (reprint ed.). Kessinger Publishing. pp. 85–87. ISBN1-4179-5438-8.
John Andrew Hamilton. "Williams, Montagu Stephen". Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900. Vol. 61.