On the evening of February 23, 1929, Constable Jack Holman had finished his shift. His duty officially ended at 11 p.m., and by all rights, he should have been on his way home—perhaps already picturing the week ahead, when he and his beloved fiancée, Pearl Wilson, were to be married.
But fate had other plans.
At 11:15 p.m., Holman was unexpectedly called back to duty. Alongside two fellow officers, he was dispatched to investigate a reported disturbance on Grenfell Street.
At the scene, they found an abandoned motorcycle. Playing it safe, the officers proceeded to impound the machine and take it to the City Watchhouse. Holman volunteered to ride it in. The motorcycle, however, was temperamental—refusing to start and forcing the men to push it a distance before it finally roared to life.
Those lost minutes would prove fatal.
As Holman rode off into the night, the delay placed him directly in the path of the very disturbance they’d been sent to check—McGrath and his cronies. Shots rang out. One bullet struck Holman in the stomach. Gravely wounded, he still managed to rise and chase his assailant nearly 50 yards before collapsing on the road.
He died within the hour.
Holman had served just two years in the police force. Described as a courteous and capable officer with every promise of advancement, his death sent shockwaves through South Australia. Thousands attended his funeral. Every department of the South Australian Police Force was represented. Yet amid the sea of uniforms the most broken heart belonged to Pearl Wilson.
They were to be married within days.
Pearl’s grief lingered long after the headlines faded. On the first anniversary of Holman’s death, she placed a tender tribute In Memoriam:
“In loving memory of Jack, who passed away February 23rd, 1929.
Loved in life, cherished in death,
A beautiful memory is all we have left.”
By the third anniversary, the tribute had become more formal:
“In memory of Constable Jack, who died on the 24th of February 1929.
You live with us in memories still.
Not just today, but always will.
Inserted by Pearl and Wilson family.”
Gone was the intimacy of “Jack.” Now, he was “Constable Jack.” The message came not just from Pearl, but from “Pearl” AND the “Wilson family.” A subtle shift—yet perhaps a telling one. Had she remarried? Perhaps this was her way of saying one final goodbye? We can only speculate. History leaves no answers for this.
As for McGrath, he was found guilty and sentenced to death. The sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, and he was released after serving just 13 years.
But Jack Holman never got the years he was owed. And Pearl’s life was changed irrevocably. Their story ended just when it was meant to begin.
To uncover more Adelaide Crime History, consider booking tickets to Adelaide’s True Crime Tour here @ https://darkstories.com.au/adelaide-true-crime-tour/.