Kempton Bunton | |
---|---|
Born | Kempton Cannon Bunton[citation needed] 14 June 1904[1] Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England[1] |
Died | April 1976[3] Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England[2] |
Spouse | Dorothy Bunton (née Donnelly)[3] |
Children | five (incl. sons John and Kenneth)[1][2] |
Criminal charge | offence contrary to section 2 of the Larceny Act 1916 [unlawfully taking property of the Trustees of the National Gallery by stealing the frame of the portrait of the Duke of Wellington][1][2] |
Penalty | 3 mos. imprisonment[2] |
Imprisoned at | H.M. Prison Ford[1] |
Kempton Cannon Bunton (14 June 1904[1]–April 1976[3]) was a disabled British pensioner[not verified in body] and unemployed bus driver who confessed to taking Francisco Goya's painting Portrait of the Duke of Wellington from the National Gallery in London in 1961.[4][2][5] The story of Bunton and the painting was the subject of the October 2015 BBC Radio 4 drama Kempton and the Duke,[6] and the 2020 film The Duke.[7]
A National Archives file released in 2012 revealed Bunton's son John had confessed to the theft in 1969.[8]
...an unemployed driver, Kempton Bunton, admitted going into the National Gallery through an open window and going out with the painting under his arm. / He said he wanted to use the ransom money to buy TV licences for the poor and he served three months in jail. But papers released by the National Gallery in 1996 revealed that he was probably innocent.