CHAPTER LII.
NEWGATE.
The Fifth City Gate—Howard's Description of Newgate—The Gordon Riots—The Attack on Newgate—The Mad Quaker—Crabbe, the Poet—
His Account of the Burning of Newgate—Dr. Johnson's Visit to the Ruins.
Newgate, which Stow classifies as the fifth principal gate in the City wall, was first built about the
reign of Henry I. or Stephen, and was a prison for
felons and trespassers at least as early as the reign
of King John. It was erected when, St. Paul's
being rebuilt, the old wards, from Aldgate to
Ludgate, were stopped up by enclosures and building materials, and people had to work round deviously by Paternoster Row and the old Exchange
to get to Ludgate.
In the year 1218 the king wrote to the Sheriffs
of London, "commanding them to repair the
gaol at Newgate, for the safe keeping of his
prisoners, promising that the charges laid out should
be allowed them upon their accompt in the Exchequer" (Stow). In 1241 some rich Jews (accused
of imaginary crimes) were ordered to pay 20,000
marks, or be kept perpetual prisoners at Newgate
and other prisons. In this same reign Henry sent
the sheriffs to the Tower, and fined the City 3,000
marks, for allowing a convicted priest, who had
killed a prior, a cousin of the queen, to escape from
Newgate. Sir William Walworth in 1385 left money
to relieve the prisoners in Newgate, and Whittington
left money to rebuild the prison. In 1457 there
was again a break-out from Newgate prison. Lord
Egremond, Sir Thomas and Sir Richard Percy, committed to Newgate for a fray in the north country
with the Earl of Salisbury's sons, in which fray
many were maimed or slain, broke out of prison
by night, and went to petition the king, the other
prisoners, in the meantime, garrisoning the leads of
Newgate, and defending it against all the sheriffs;
till at last the citizens were called up to subdue and
lay in irons the reckless rebels.
The gate was repaired in 1630–3, destroyed in
the Great Fire, and rebuilt in a stronger and more
convenient way, with a postern for foot passengers.
On the east or City side of the old prison were
three stone statues—Justice, Mercy, and Truth;
and four on the west, or Holborn side—Liberty
(with Whittington's cat at her feet), Peace, Plenty,
and Concord. Four of these figures, which survived the Gordon riots, ornament part of the front
of the present prison.
Howard, the philanthropist, writing in 1784, gives
a favourable account of the Newgate of 1779.
"The cells," says Howard, "built in old Newgate, a few years since, for condemned malefactors,
are still used for the same purpose. There are
upon each of the three floors five, all vaulted, near
9 feet high to the crown. Those on the groundfloor measure full 9 feet by near 6 feet; the five on
the first storey are a little larger (9½ feet by 6 feet),
on account of the set-off in the wall; and the five
uppermost still a little larger, for the same reason.
In the upper part of each cell is a window, double
grated, near 3 feet by 1½. The doors are 4 inches
thick. The strong stone wall is lined all round
each cell with planks, studded with broad-headed
nails. In each cell is a barrack bedstead. I
was told by those who attended them that criminals who had affected an air of boldness during
their trial, and appeared quite unconcerned at the
pronouncing sentence upon them, were struck with
horror, and shed tears, when brought to these darksome, solitary abodes.
"The chapel is plain and neat. Below is the
chaplain's seat, and three or four pews for the
felons; that in the centre is for the condemned.
On each side is a gallery: that for the women is
towards their ward; in it is a pew for the keeper,
whose presence may set a good example, and be
otherwise useful. The other gallery, towards the
debtors' ward, is for them. The stairs to each
gallery are on the outside of the chapel. I attended there several times, and Mr. Villette read
the prayers distinctly, and with propriety. The
prisoners who were present seemed attentive; but
we were disturbed by the noise in the court. Surely
they who will not go to chapel, who are by far the
greater number, should be locked up in their rooms
during the time of divine service, and not suffered
to hinder the edification of such as are better disposed.
"The chaplain, or ordinary, besides his salary,
has a house in Newgate Street, clear of land-tax;
Lady Barnadiston's legacy, £6 a year; an old
legacy paid by the Governors of St. Bartholomew's
Hospital, £10 a year; and lately had two freedoms yearly, which commonly sold for £25 each;
and the City generally presented him, once in six
months, with another freedom. Now he has not
the freedoms, but his salary is augmented to £180,
and the sheriffs pay him £3 12s. He engages,
when chosen, to hold no other living.
"Debtors have, every Saturday, from the Chamber
of London, eight stone of beef; fines, four stone;
and, some years, felons, eight stone. Debtors have
several legacies. I inquired for a list of them,
and Mr. Akerman told me the table in Maitland's
'Survey' was authentic. The amount of it is
£52 5s. 8d. a year. There are other donations
mentioned by Maitland, amounting to sixty-four
stone of beef, and five dozen of bread. . . . . .
"Here I cannot forbear mentioning a practice,
which probably had its origin from the ancient
mode of torture, though now it seems only a matter
of form. When prisoners capitally convicted at
the Old Bailey are brought up to receive sentence,
and the judge asks, 'What have you to say why
judgment of death and execution should not be
awarded against you?' the executioner slips a
whipcord noose about their thumbs. This custom
ought to be abolished.
"At my visit, in 1779, the gaol was clean, and
free from offensive scents. On the felons' side there
were only three sick, in one of the upper wards. An
infirmary was building, near the condemned cells.
Of the 141 felons, &c., there were ninety-one convicts and fines who had only the prison allowance
of a penny loaf a day. Mr. Akerman generously
contributed towards their relief. In the felons' court
the table of fees, painted on a board, was hung up.
"The gaol was burnt by the rioters in 1780.
but is rebuilt on the same plan. The men's
quadrangle is now divided into three courts. In
the first court are those who pay 3s. 6d. a week for
a bed; in the next, the poorer felons; and in the
other, now, the women. Under the chapel are
cells for the refractory. Two rooms, adjoining to
the condemned cells, are built for an infirmary, in
one of which, at my last visit, there were sixteen
sick. Of the 291 prisoners in 1782, 225 were men
and 66 women. Upwards of 100 of them were
transports, 89 fines, 21 under sentence of death,
and the remainder lay for trial. Some of the condemned had been long sick and languishing in
their cells."
From the Old Bailey Session Papers for June,
1780, we gather a very vivid and picturesque notion
of the destruction of Newgate during the Gordon
riots. The mob came pouring down Holborn,
between six and seven o'clock, on the evening of
the 6th of June. There were three flags carried
by the ringleaders—the first of green silk, with a
Protestant motto; the second, dirty blue, with a
red cross; the third, a flag of the Protestant Union.
A sailor named Jackson had hoisted the second
flag in Palace Yard, when Justice Hyde had
launched a party of horse upon the people; and
when the rabble had sacked the justice's house in
St. Martin's Street, Jackson shouted, "Newgate,
a-hoy!" and led the people on to the Old Bailey.
Mr. Akerman, a friend of Boswell, and one of the
keepers of Newgate, had had intimation of the
danger two hours before, when a friend of one of
the prisoners called upon him just as he was packing up his plate for removal, told him "he should
be the one hung presently," and cursed him.
Exactly at seven, one of the rioters knocked at Mr.
Akerman's door, which had been already barred,
bolted, and chained. A maid-servant had just put
up the shutters, when the glass over the hall-door
was dashed into her face. The ringleader who
knocked was better dressed than the rest, and
wore a dark brown coat and round hat. The man
knocked three times, and rang three times; then,
finding no one came, ran down the steps, "made
his obeisance to the mob," pointed to the door,
then retired. The mob was perfectly organised,
and led by about thirty men walking three abreast.
Thirty men carried iron crowbars, mattocks, and
chisels, and after them followed "an innumerable
company," armed with bludgeons and the spokes
of cart-wheels. The band instantly divided into
three parts—one set went to work at Mr. Akerman's door with the mattocks, a second went to
the debtors' door, and a third to the felons'. A
shower of bludgeons instantly demolished the
windows of the keeper's house; and while these
sticks were still falling in showers, two men, one of
them a mad Quaker, the son of a rich corn-factor,
who wore a mariner's jacket, came forward with
a scaffold-pole, and drove it like a battering-ram
against the parlour shutters. A lad in a sailor's
jacket then got on a man's shoulders, and rammed
in the half-broken shutters with furious blows of
his bullet-head. A chimney-sweeper's boy then
scrambled in, cheered by the mob, and after
him the mad Quaker. A moment more, and the
Quaker appeared at the first-floor window, flinging
out pictures into the street. Presently, the second
parlour window gave way, the house-door was forced,
and the furniture and broken chattels in the street
were set in a blaze. All this time a circle of men,
better dressed than the rest, stood in the Old
Bailey, exciting and encouraging the rioters. The
leader of these sympathisers was a negro servant,
named Benjamin Bowsey, afterwards hung for his
share in the riot. One of the leaders in this attack
was a mad waiter from the St. Alban's Tavern, named
Thomas Haycock. He was very prominent, and he
swore that there should not be a prison standing in
London on the morrow, and that the Bishop of
London's house and the Duke of Norfolk's should
come down that night. "They were well supported,
he shouted to the mob," for there were six or
seven noblemen and members of Parliament on
their side. This man helped to break up a bureau,
and collected sticks to burn down the doors of
Akerman's house. While Akerman's house was still
burning, the servants escaping over the roofs, and
Akerman's neighbours were down among the mob,
entreating them to spare the houses of innocent
persons, a waiter, named Francis Mockford, who
wore a hat with a blue cockade in it, went up to the
prison-gate and held up the main key, and shouted
to the turnkeys, "D—you, here is the key of
Newgate; open the door!" Mockford, who was
eventually sentenced to death for this riot, afterwards took the prison keys, and flung them over
Westminster Bridge. George Sims, a tripeman
in St. James's Market, always forward in street
quarrels, then went up to the great gate in the Old
Bailey with some others, and swore desperately
that "he would have the gates down—curse him, he
would have the gates down!" Then the storm
broke; the mob rushed on the gate with the
sledge-hammers and pickaxes they had stolen from
coachmakers, blacksmiths, and braziers in Drury
Lane and Long Acre, and plied them with untiring
fury. The tripeman, who carried a bludgeon, urged
them on; and the servant of Akerman, having
known the man for several years, called to him
through the hatch, "Very well, George the tripeman; I shall mark you in particular!" Then
John Glover, a black, a servant of a Mr. Phillips,
a barrister in Lincoln's Inn, who was standing on
the steps leading to the felons' gate (the main gate),
dressed in a rough short jacket, and a round hat
trimmed with dirty silver lace, thumped at the
door with a gun-barrel, which he afterwards tried
to thrust through the grating into the faces of
the turnkeys, while another split the door with a
hatchet. The mob, finding they could not force
the stones out round the hatch, then piled Akerman's shattered furniture, and placing it against the
gates set the heap on fire.
Several times the gate caught fire, and as often
the turnkeys inside pushed down the burning
furniture with broomsticks, which they pushed
through the hatch, and kept swilling the gates with
water, in order to cool them, and to keep the lead
that soldered the hinges from melting and giving
way. But all their efforts were in vain; for the
flames, now spreading fast from Akerman's house,
gradually burnt in to the fore-lodge and chapel, and
set the different wards one after the other on fire.
Crabbe the poet, who was there as a spectator,
describes seeing the prisoners come up out of the
dark cells with their heavy irons, and looking pale
and scared. Some of them were carried off on
horseback, their irons still on, in triumph by the
mob, who then went and burnt down the Fleet.
At the trial of Richard Hyde, the poor mad Quaker,
who had been one of the first to scramble through
Mr. Akerman's windows, the most conclusive
proofs were brought forward of the prisoner's insanity. A grocer in Bishopsgate Street, with whom
he had lodged, deposed to his burning a Bible, and
to his thrashing him. One day at the "Doctor
Butler's Head," in Coleman Street, the crazed fellow
had come in, and pretended to cast the nativities of
persons drinking there. He also prophesied how
long each of them would live. On hearing this
evidence, the prisoner broke out: "Well, and they
might live three hundred years, if they knew how
to live; but they gorge themselves like aldermen.
Callipash and callipee kills half the people." It
was also shown that, the night after the burning
of Newgate, the prisoner came to a poor woman's
house in Bedford Court, Covent Garden, and he
then wore an old grey great-coat and a flapped hat,
painted blue. As the paint was wet, the woman
asked him to let her dry it. He replied, "No, you
are a fool; my hat is blue" (the Protestant colour);
"it is the colour of the heavens. I would not have
it dried for the world." When the woman brought
him a pint of beer, he drank once, and then pushed
it angrily on one side. He then said, "I have
tasted it once, I must taste it three times; it is
against the heavens to drink only once out of a
pot." Doctor Munro, the physician who attended
George III. in his madness, deposed to the insanity
both of the prisoner's father and the prisoner. He
was sent to a mad-house.

DOOR OF NEWGATE.
Crabbe, who, having failed as a surgeon and
apothecary down at Aldborough, his native place,
had just come up to London to earn his bread as
a poet, and being on the brink of starvation, was
about to apply to Burke for patronage and bread.
Rambling in a purposeless way about London to
while away the miserable time, the young poet
happened to reach the Old Bailey just as the ragged
rioters set it on fire to warm their Protestantism.
Suddenly, at a turning out of Ludgate Hill, on his
way back to his lodgings at a hairdresser's shop
near the Exchange, a scene of terror and horror
broke red upon the view of the mild young Suffolk
apothecary. The new prison, Crabbe says, in his
"Journal" kept for the perusal of his Myra (June
8th), was a very large, strong, and beautiful building, having two wings besides Mr. Akerman's
house, and strong intermediate works and other
adjuncts. Akerman had four rioters in custody,
and these rascals the mob demanded. He begged
he might send to the sheriff, but this was not permitted. "How he escaped, or where he is gone, I
know not; but just at the time I speak of, they
set fire to his house, broke in, and threw every
piece of furniture they could find into the street,
firing them also in an instant. The engines came"
(they were mere squirts in those days), "but were
only suffered to preserve the private houses near
the prison." This was about half-past seven. "As
I was standing near the spot, there approached
another body of men—I suppose five hundred—
and Lord George Gordon in a coach drawn by the
mob, towards Alderman Bull's, bowing as he passed
along. He is a lively-looking young man in appearance, and nothing more, though just now the
reigning hero. By eight o'clock Akerman's house
was in flames. I went close to it, and never saw
anything so dreadful. The prison was, as I said,
a remarkably strong building; but, determined to
force it, they broke the gates with crows and other
instruments, and climbed up the outside of the cell
part, which joins the two great wings of the building, where the felons were confined; and I stood
where I plainly saw their operations. They broke
the roof, tore away the rafters, and having got
ladders they descended. Not Orpheus himself
had more courage or better luck. Flames all
around them, and a body of soldiers expected,
they defied and laughed at all opposition. The
prisoners escaped. I stood and saw about twelve
women and eight men ascend from their confinement to the open air, and they were conducted
through the street in their chains. Three of these
were to be hanged on Friday" (Newgate was burnt
on the Tuesday). "You have no conception of
the frenzy of the multitude. This being done, and
Akerman's house now a mere shell of brickwork,
they kept a store of flame there for other purposes.
It became red-hot, and the doors and windows
appeared like the entrance to so many volcanoes.
With some difficulty they then fired the debtors'
prison, broke the doors, and they, too, all made
their escape. Tired of the scene, I went home,
and returned again at eleven o'clock at night. I
met large bodies of horse and foot soldiers, coming
to guard the Bank, and some houses of Roman
Catholics near it. Newgate was at this time open
to all; any one might get in, and, what was never
the case before, any one might get out. I did
both, for the people were now chiefly lookers-on.
The mischief was done, and the doers of it gone
to another part of the town" (to Bloomsbury
Square, to burn Lord Mansfield's house). "But
I must not omit what struck me most: about ten
or twelve of the mob getting to the top of the
debtors' prison, whilst it was burning, to halloo,
they appeared rolled in black smoke mixed with
sudden bursts of fire—like Milton's infernals, who
were as familiar with flame as with each other."

BURNING OF NEWGATE. (From a Contemporary Print.)
On the Wednesday, the day after the fire, a big
carelessly-dressed man worked his way to the ruins
from Bolt Court, Fleet Street. The burly man's
name was Doctor Samuel Johnson, and he wrote
to Mrs. Thrale and her husband a brief account
of what had happened since the Friday before.
On that day Lord George Gordon and the mob
went to Westminster, and that night the rioters
burnt the Catholic chapel in Duke Street, Lincoln's
Inn Fields. On Monday they gutted Sir George
Saville's house in Leicester Square; on Tuesday
pulled down the house of Sir John Fielding, the
blind magistrate and the novelist's half-brother, in
Bow Street; and the same night burnt Newgate,
Lord Mansfield's house in Bloomsbury, and a
Catholic chapel in Moorfields. On Wednesday
they burnt the Fleet and the King's Bench, and
attacked the Bank of England, but were driven off
by a party of constables headed by John Wilkes.
"On Wednesday," says the doctor, to come to
what he actually saw himself, "I walked with
Doctor Scott, to look at Newgate, and found it in
ruins, with the fire yet glowing. As I went by, the
Protestants were plundering the Sessions House
at the Old Bailey. There were not, I believe, a
hundred; but they did their work at leisure, in
full security, without sentinels, without trepidation,
as men lawfully employed in full day. Such is the
cowardice of a commercial place. On Wednesday
they broke open the Fleet, and the King's Bench,
and the Marshalsea, and Wood Street Compter,
and Clerkenwell Bridewell, and released all the
prisoners. At night they set fire to the Fleet, and
to the King's Bench, and I don't know how many
other places; and one might see the glare of conflagration fill the sky from many parts. The sight
was dreadful. Some people were threatened. Mr.
Strahan advised me to take care of myself. . .
. . . Several chapels have been destroyed, and
several inoffensive Papists have been plundered;
but the high sport was to burn the gaols. This was
a good rabble trick. The debtors and the criminals
were all set at liberty; but of the criminals, as has
always happened, many are already re-taken, and
two pirates have surrendered themselves, and it is
expected that they will be pardoned." Then follows
a fine touch of irony: "Jack" (Wilkes), "who was
always zealous for order and decency, declares that
if he be trusted with power, he will not leave a
rioter alive. There is, however, now no longer any
need of heroism or bloodshed; no blue ribbon"
(the badge of the rioters) "is any longer worn."
As for Thrale, his brewery escaped pretty well.
The men gave away a cask or two of beer to the
mob, and when the rioters came on a second and
more importunate visit, the soldiers received them.
CHAPTER LIII.
NEWGATE (continued).
Methodist Preachers in Newgate—Silas Told—The Surgeons' Crew—Dr. Dodd, the Popular Preacher—His Forgery—Governor Wall at Goree
flogs a Soldier to Death—His Last Moments—Murder of Mr. Steele—Execution of the Cato Street Conspirators—Fauntleroy, the Banker
—The Murder of the Italian Boy—Greenacre—Müller—Courvoisier—His Execution—Mrs. Brownrigg—Mr. Akerman and the Fire in
Newgate—Mrs. Fry's Good Work in Newgate—Escapes from Newgate—Jack Sheppard—A Good Sermon on a Bad Text—Sanitary Condition of Newgate—Effect upon the Prisoners.
In the year 1744 Silas Told, a worthy Wesleyan,
deeply touched by a sermon preached by Wesley
on the text, "I was sick and in prison, and ye
visited me not" (Matt. xxv. 43), began to exert
himself among the prisoners at Newgate, and
has left a graphic and simple-hearted account of
his labours among them; and from this book we
obtain many curious glimpses of prison life at that
period. The first persons Told visited were ten
malefactors, then under sentence of death. "The
report having been made," says Told, "and the
dead-warrant coming down, eight of the ten were
ordered for execution. The other two were
respited; nor did either of those two appear to
have any the least regard or concern for their
deathless souls; therefore I trust they were spared
for a good purpose, that they might have time for
repentance and amendment of life.
"The day arrived whereon the other eight malefactors were to die. Sarah Peters and myself were
early at the cell, in order to render them all the
spiritual service that was within our power. The
keeper having received directions on the over-night
to lock them all up in one cell, that they might
pour out their souls together in fervent solemn
prayer to Almighty God, they paid very circumspect attention thereto, and a happy night it
proved to each of them; so that when they were
led down from their cell, they appeared like giants
refreshed with wine, nor was the fear of death
apparent in any of their countenances. We then
went up to the chapel, when my companion and
myself conversed with them in the press-yard room.
Upon being called out to have their irons taken
off, Lancaster was the first. While they were disburthening his legs thereof, the sheriff being present,
Lancaster looked up to heaven with a pleasant
smile, and said, 'Glory be to God for the first
moment of my entrance into this place! For before
I came hither my heart was as hard as my cell wall,
and my soul was as black as hell. But, oh, I am
now washed, clearly washed, from all my sins, and
by one o'clock shall be with Jesus in Paradise!'
And with many strong and forcible expressions he
exhorted the innumerable spectators to flee from
the wrath to come. This caused the sheriff to shed
tears, and ask Mr. Lancaster if he was really in
earnest, being so greatly affected with his lively
and animated spirit. As their irons were taken off
they were remanded back to the press-yard room;
but, by some accident, they were a long time
getting off the last man's fetters. When they were
gotten off, Lancaster, beholding him at a short
distance, clapped his hands together, and joyfully
proclaimed, 'Here comes another of our little
flock!' A gentleman present said, with an apparent sympathising spirit, 'I think it is too great a
flock upon such an occasion.' Lancaster, with the
greatest fluency of speech, and with an aspiring
voice, said, 'Oh, no; it is not too great a flock for
the shepherd Jesus; there is room enough in
heaven for us all.' When he exhorted the populace
to forsake their sins, he particularly endeavoured
to press on them to come to the Throne of Grace
immediately, and without fear, assuring them that
they would find Him a gracious and merciful God,
to forgive them, as He had forgiven him. At length
they were ordered into the cart, and I was prevailed upon to go with them. When we were in the
cart, I addressed myself to each of these separately."
Told's account of the execution of these men
shows clearly how lawless and savage were the
mobs which gathered at Tyburn. "When we
came to the fatal tree Lancaster lifted up his eyes
thereto, and said, 'Blessed be God,' then prayed
extemporary in a very excellent manner, and the
others behaved with great discretion. John Lancaster had no friend who could procure for his
body a proper interment; so that, when they had
hung the usual space of time, and were cut down,
the surgeon's mob secured the body of Lancaster,
and carried it over to Paddington. There was a
very crowded concourse, among whom were numberless gin and gingerbread vendors, accompanied
by pickpockets and even less respectable characters, of almost every denomination in London;
in short, the whole scene resembled a principal
fair, rather than an awful execution. Now, when
the mob was nearly dispersed, and there remained
only a few bystanders, with an old woman who
sold gin, a remarkable occurrence took place, and
operated to the following effect:—
"A company of eight sailors, with truncheons in
their hands, having come to see the execution,
looked up to the gallows with an angry countenance,
the bodies having been cut down some minutes
previous to their arrival. The old woman before
named, who sold gin, observing these tars to grow
violent, by reason of their disappointment, mildly
accosted them and said, 'Gentlemen, I suppose
you want the man that the surgeons have got?'
'Aye,' replied the sailors; 'where is he?' The
poor affrighted woman gave them to understand
that the surgeons' crew had carried him over
to Paddington, and she pointed out to them the
direct road thereto. They hastened away, and as
they entered the town, inquiry was made by them
where the surgeons' mob was to be discovered, and
receiving the information they wanted, they went
and demanded the body of John Lancaster. When
the sailors had obtained the body, two of them
cast it on their shoulders, and carried him round by
Islington. They being tired out with its pressure,
two others laid themselves under the weight of the
body, and carried it from thence to Shoreditch.
Then two more carried it from Shoreditch to Coverley's Fields. At length, after they were all rendered
completely weary, and unable to carry it any farther,
the sequel of their project, and their ultimate contrivance to rid themselves of the body was an
unanimous consent to lay it on the step of the first
door they came to. They did so, and then went
their way. This gave birth to a great riot in the
neighbourhood, which brought an old woman, who
lived in the house, down-stairs. When she saw
the corpse lie at the step of the door, she proclaimed, with an agitated spirit, 'Lord, here is my
son, John Lancaster!' This being spread abroad,
came to the knowledge of the Methodists, who
made a collection, and got him a shroud and a good
strong coffin. I was soon informed of this event,
which was peculiarly singular, as the seamen had
no knowledge of the body, nor to whom he belonged when living. My second wife went with
me to see him, previous to the burial; but neither
of us could perceive the least alteration in his
visage or features, or any appearance of violence
on any part of his body. A pleasant smile
appeared in his countenance, and he lay as in a
sweet sleep."
Told gives a terrible picture of the state of Newgate about 1744—the felons swearing and cursing
at the preacher, and the ordinary himself guarding
the prison doors on Sunday morning, to obstruct
Told's entrance. Told, however, zealous in the
cause, persevered, and soon formed a society of
about forty of the debtors, who formed his Sunday
congregation. The ordinary, however, soon contrived to shut out Told from this part of the prison
also. He therefore betook himself almost entirely
to the graver malefactors. His account of some
of these unhappy men is extremely interesting.
During his visits to Newgate six men of good
family were lying there, sentenced to death for
highway robbery. Of these, one was the son of an
Irish divine, two others were men of fortune, and
a fourth was a naval officer, to whom a daughter of
the Duke of Hamilton was engaged to be married.
After an election dinner, at Chelmsford, these men,
for fun, had sallied out and robbed a farmer in
the highway. The king was unwilling to pardon
any of the party; but at the incessant importunities of Lady Elizabeth Hamilton, at last consented
to reprieve her lover, but only at the gallows'
foot. He fainted when the halter was removed,
and was instantly lifted into the carriage, where
Lady Betty awaited him. Six weeks after, to
Told's vexation, he found the reprieved man gambling with a fraudulent bankrupt, who shortly afterwards was himself executed at Tyburn. Told's
next visit was to Mary Edmonson, a poor girl
hung at Kennington Common for murdering her
aunt at Rotherhithe. The girl was entirely innocent, and the real murderer, a relation, who was a
foot-soldier, came up into the cart to salute her
before she was turned off. Some time after, this
man riding in a post-chaise past the gallows at
Kennington said to a friend, "There is the place
where my kinswoman was hung wrongfully. I
should have gone in her room." The rascal
was soon after found guilty of highway robbery,
and cast for death, but reprieved by the judge,
who did not wish to draw attention to the scandal
of an innocent person having been sent to the
gallows. Silas Told says that at the execution
of Mary Edmonson he walked by the cart, urging
her to prayer, holding the bridle of the sheriff's
horse, in spite of a most cruel and violent
mob. Told also mentions attending Harris, the
"Flying Highwayman," to the gallows, a man
who, the very morning of his execution, was so
violent in the chapel that the ordinary ran for his
life. Just beyond Hatton Garden, after some exhortations of honest Told, the indomitable ruffian,
at his request, shut his eyes, hung back his head
on the side-rail of the cart, and after ten minutes'
meditation burst into tears, and, clapping his hands
together, cried, "Now I know that the Lord Jesus
has forgiven me all my sins, and I have nothing to
do but to die." He then burst into a loud extemporary prayer, and continued happy to the last,
but still denying that he ever "flew" a turnpikegate in his life. Another case mentioned by Told
does not give us a very enlarged view of the tender
mercies of the time. A poor man, Anderson, entirely destitute, was sentenced to death for taking
sixpence from two washerwomen in Hoxton Fields.
The man had served with credit on board a manof-war, and his own parish had petitioned on his
behalf. The Privy Council, however, insisted on
confounding him with one of the same name, a
celebrated highwayman of the day, and to Tyburn
he went.
In 1770, when Mr. Akerman, one of the keepers,
appeared before a Committee of the House of
Commons, Newgate appears to have been a sink
of filth and a den of iniquity. It was over-crowded,
ill-disciplined, badly ventilated, and ill-supplied with
water. The prisoners died in great numbers; and
as Mr. Akerman, a good and trusty official, stated,
two whole sets of gaol-officers had been cut off
by gaol distemper since he had been in office;
and in the spring of 1750 the gaol was so terribly
infectious, that the contagion was carried into the
Old Bailey court, and two of the judges, the Lord
Mayor, and several of the jury, more than sixty
in all, died in consequence. A huge ventilator
was then erected, but this alarmed the whole
neighbourhood, and the residents complained, with
bitter outcries, that the poisonous air was drawn
from the prison cells, to destroy all who lived near.
One of the earliest anecdotes of Newgate is
to be found in a letter to the Duke of Shrewsbury, dated August 10, 1699. "All the talk of
the town," says the writer, "is about a tragical
piece of gallantry at Newgate. I don't doubt but
what your grace has heard of a bastard son of
Sir George Norton, who was under sentence of
death for killing a dancing-master in the streets.
The Lords Justices reprieved him, till they heard
from the judge that no exception was to be
taken at the verdict. It being signified to the
young man, on Tuesday last in the afternoon,
that he was to die the next day, his aunt, who was
sister to his mother, brought two doses of opium,
and they took it between them. The ordinary
came soon after to perform his functions; but
before he had done, he found so great alterations in
both persons that it was no hard matter to find
out the cause of it. The aunt frankly declared
she could not survive her nephew, her life being
wrapped up in his; and he declared that the law
having put a period to his life, he thought it no
offence to choose the way he would go out of the
world. The keeper sent for his apothecary to apply
remedies, who brought two vomits. The young
man refused to take it, till they threatened to force
it down by instruments. He told them, since he
hoped the business was done, he would make himself and them easy, and swallowed the potion, and
his aunt did the like. The remedy worked upon
her, and set her a-vomiting, but had no effect on
Mr. Norton, so that he dozed away gradually, and
by eight that evening was grown senseless, though
he did not expire till nine next morning. He was
fully resolved upon the business, for he had likewise a charged pistol hid in the room. The aunt
was carried to a neighbouring house, and has a
guard upon her. They say she is like to recover;
if she does, it will be hard if she suffer for such a
transport of affection."
Among the many guilty and unhappy criminals
who have sat in Newgate and counted the moments
that lay between them and death, one of the most
unhappy must have been that once popular preacher,
Dr. Dodd, who was hung for forgery in 1777.
Dodd was the son of a clergyman who was vicar of
Bourne, in Lincolnshire. On leaving Cambridge
he married imprudently, and became a small poet,
and compiler of the "Beauties of Shakespeare," a
work still reprinted. He then renounced literature,
entered the Church, and in 1758 was appointed
preacher to the Magdalen Hospital, where Horace
Walpole describes his flowery sermons, which set
all the ladies of fashion sobbing. Gross flattery of
Dr. Squire, Bishop of St. David's, procured him,
in 1763, the prebendaryship of Brecon. Soon after
this the grateful bishop introduced Dodd to the
Earl of Chesterfield, as a tutor to his son, and
about the same time Dodd was appointed one of
the king's chaplains, and in 1766 took his degree
of LL.D. at Cambridge. He now dabbled in
lotteries, and, having won a £1,000 prize, erected
a chapel near Buckingham Palace, and also bought
a share in Charlotte Chapel, Bloomsbury. Overwhelmed with debt, Dodd brought out several
religious works, with the hope of winning patrons
by his fulsome dedications. In 1773 he was
appointed chaplain to the young Lord Chesterfield, the hopeless cub to whom the celebrated
"Letters" were addressed. The rich living of
St. George's, Hanover Square, just then falling
vacant, Dodd was unwise enough to write an
anonymous letter to Lady Apsley, wife of the Lord
Chancellor, offering £3,000 for the appointment.
The letter was traced to its source, and handed
to the king, and the writer's name was ordered
immediately to be struck out of the list of chaplains.
Foote, always cruel in his fun, introduced Dodd
into one of his Haymarket pieces as Dr. Simony.
Dodd promised an explanation, but it never came.
He retired for a time to Geneva, and the society
of Lord Chesterfield, till the storm blew over.
Though enjoying an income of £800 a year,
Dodd, entangled by press of debts, one fatal day,
signed the name of Lord Chesterfield, his old pupil,
to a bond for £4,200. The signature disowned,
Dodd, who then lived in Argyle Street, was apprehended. He at once repaid part of the money,
and gave a judgment on his goods for the remainder. The prosecutors were reluctant to proceed; and Lord Chesterfield, it is said, placed the
forgery in Dodd's hands, as he stood near a fire, in
hopes that he would destroy it; but Dodd wanted
promptitude and presence of mind, and soon after
the Lord Mayor compelled the prosecution. He
was tried and found guilty. Dr. Johnson, on being
applied to, wrote the speech delivered by Dodd
before his sentence. He also composed several
petitions for him, and a sermon which Dr. Dodd
delivered to his fellow-prisoners shortly before his
execution.

THE CONDEMNED CELL IN NEWGATE.
In Newgate this vain and shallow man acted
the martyr, and wrote a book called "Thoughts
in Prison," and believed in the possibility of a
reprieve, though the king was inflexible, because
in a recent case of forgery (that of Daniel and
Robert Perreau, wine merchants), the sentence had
been carried out. "If Dr. Dodd is pardoned,"
the king said, "then the Perreaus were murdered."
The friends of Dodd were zealous to the last.
Dr. Johnson told Boswell that £1,000 were ready
for any gaoler who would let him escape. A
wax image of him had also been made, to be left
in his bed, but the scheme, somehow or other,
miscarried. Anthony Morris Storer, writing to
George Selwyn, who had a passion for executions,
thus describes Dodd's behaviour at Tyburn:—
"The doctor, to all appearance, was rendered
perfectly stupid from despair. His hat was flapped
all round, and pulled over his eyes, which were
never directed to any object around, nor even
raised, except now and then lifted up in the course
of his prayers. He came in a coach, and a very
heavy shower of rain fell just upon his entering the
cart, and another just at his putting on his night-cap.

THE OLD SESSIONS' HOUSE IN THE OLD BAILEY IN 1750.
"He was a considerable time in praying, which
some people standing about seemed rather tired
with; they rather wished for some more interesting
part of the tragedy. The wind, which was high,
blew off his hat, which rather embarrassed him,
and discovered to us his countenance, which we
could scarcely see before. His hat, however, was
soon restored to him, and he went on with his
prayers. There were two clergymen attending
him, one of whom seemed very much affected;
the other, I suppose, was the ordinary of Newgate,
as he was perfectly indifferent and unfeeling in
everything that he said and did.
"The executioner took both the hat and wig off
at the same time. Why he put on his wig again I
do not know, but he did, and the doctor took off
his wig a second time, and then tied on a nightcap
which did not fit him; but whether he stretched
that, or took another, I could not perceive. He
then put on his nightcap himself, and upon his
taking it, he certainly had a smile on his countenance. Very soon afterwards there was an end of
all his hopes and fears on this side the grave. He
never moved from the place he first took in the
cart; seemed absorbed in despair, and utterly
dejected without any other signs of animation but
in praying."
There is a tradition that the hangman had been
bribed to place the knot of the rope in a particular
manner under Dodd's ear, and also that when cut
down, the body was driven off to a house in
Goodge Street, where Pott, the celebrated surgeon,
endeavoured to restore animation. But the crowd
had been great, and the delay too long; nevertheless, it was believed by many at the time that
Dodd was really resuscitated and sent abroad. His
wife, who regarded him with great affection, died
some years after, in poverty.
In 1802 Governor Wall was hung at Newgate,
for the murder of Benjamin Armstrong, a soldier,
who had been under his command at Goree, in
Africa. The high rank of Wall, and the long
period that had elapsed since the crime had been
committed, excited great interest in his fate. He
had been Governor of Goree in 1782, and was disliked by both officers and men, for his severe and
unforgiving disposition. The day before he returned to England, worn out with the climate,
twenty or thirty men of the African corps came to
petition the governor with regard to certain money
stopped from their pay. The spokesman at the
head of these soldiers was the unfortunate Benjamin
Armstrong, who was extremely respectful in his
manner, and paid the governor every deference.
Wall, whose temper was no doubt aggravated by
illness, instantly ordered Armstrong and his companions back to the barracks, and threatened them
with punishment. The men obeyed, and quietly
retired. Soon after his dinner-hour, Wall ran out
of his rooms, and beat a man who appeared to be
drunk, and snatching a bayonet from the sentry,
struck him with it, and ordered both men under
arrest. Eager for revenge on the "mutinous rascals,"
as he called them, Wall then ordered the long-roll
to be beat, and parade called. Three hundred men,
without firearms, were formed into a circle, two
deep, in the midst of which stood the drummers,
and the governor and his staff. A gun-carriage was
then dragged up, and Benjamin Armstrong was
called from the ranks. Five or six black slaves
then lashed the unfortunate soldier to the rings of
the gun-carriage, and Armstrong was ordered 800
lashes. With unusual cruelty, the governor ordered
the slaves to use, not the cat-o'-nine-tails, but long
lashings of rope, nearly an inch in circumference.
Every twenty-five lashes a fresh slave was called
up to continue the punishment, and the governor
encouraged the slaves by shouting "Lay on, you
black beasts, or I'll lay on you. Cut him to the
heart; cut his liver out. At the end of this
ferocity, Armstrong, with his back beaten black,
was led to the hospital, saying he should certainly
die. The rope had bruised, not cut the flesh, yet
the injuries were only the more dangerous. Five
days after the governor left Goree Armstrong died.
In 1784 Wall was arrested at Bath, but managed
to escape from the king's messengers, at the "Brown
Bear," Reading, and escaped to France, where he
changed his name. Many years later Wall rashly
returned to England, and in 1801 wrote to Lord
Pelham, Secretary of State, announcing his readiness to submit to a trial. He was tried in 1802. He
pleaded that Armstrong was the ringleader of an
open mutiny. A prisoner had been released, he
himself had been threatened with a bayonet, and
the soldiers had threatened to break open the
stores. He denied that he had ever blown men
from cannon. It was clear from the evidence that
the grossest cruelty had been used, and Wall was
at once found guilty, and sentence of death passed.
In that curious and amusing work, "A Book for
a Rainy Day," Mr. J. T. Smith, formerly keeper of
the Print Room in the British Museum, says:—"Solomon, a pencil dealer, assured me that he
could procure me a sight of the governor, if I would
only accompany him in the evening to Hatton
Garden, and smoke a pipe with Dr. Ford, the ordinary of Newgate, with whom he said he was particularly intimate. Away we trudged, and upon
entering the club-room of a public-house, we found
the said doctor most pompously seated in a superb
masonic chair, under a stately crimson canopy,
placed between the windows. The room was
clouded with smoke whiffed to the ceiling, which
gave me a better idea of what I had heard of the
Black Hole of Calcutta than any place I had seen.
There were present at least a hundred associates
of every denomination. Of this number, my Jew,
being a favoured man, was admitted to a whispering audience with the doctor, which soon produced
my introduction to him."
Sunrise, the next morning, found Mr. Smith
waiting by appointment for his new friend, Dr.
Ford, at Newgate; and this is how he describes
the end of Governor Wall:—
"As we crossed the press-yard a cock crew, and
the solitary clanking of a restless chain was dreadfully horrible. The prisoners had not risen. Upon
our entering a cold stone room, a most sickly
stench of green twigs, with which an old round-shouldered, goggle-eyed man was endeavouring to
kindle a fire, annoyed me almost as much as the
canaster fumigation of the doctor's Hatton Garden
friends.
"The prisoner entered. He was death's counterfeit, tall, shrivelled, and pale; and his soul shot so
piercingly through the port-holes of his head, that
the first glance of him nearly terrified me. I said
in my heart, putting my pencil in my pocket, 'God
forbid that I should disturb thy last moments!'
His hands were clasped, and he was truly penitent.
After the yeoman had requested him to stand up,
he 'pinioned him,' as the Newgate phrase is, and
tied the cord with so little feeling, that the governor,
who had not given the wretch the accustomed fee,
observed, 'You have tied me very tight,' upon
which Dr. Ford ordered him to slacken the
cord, which he did, but not without muttering.
'Thank you, sir,' said the governor to the doctor,
'it is of little moment.' He then observed to the
attendant, who had brought in an immense iron
shovelful of coals to throw on the fire, 'Ay, in
one hour that will be a blazing fire;' then, turning
to the doctor, questioned him, 'Do tell me, sir: I
am informed I shall go down with great force; is
that so?' After the construction and action of the
machine had been explained, the doctor questioned
the governor as to what kind of men he had at
Goree. 'Sir,' he answered, 'they sent me the very
riff-raff.' The poor soul then joined the doctor in
prayer; and never did I witness more contrition at
any condemned sermon than he then evinced."
Directly the execution was over, Mr. Smith left
Newgate, where the hangman was selling the rope
that had hung Governor Wall for a shilling an inch,
and in Newgate Street a starved old man was
selling another identical rope, at the ridiculously
low price of only sixpence an inch; while at the
north-east corner of Warwick Lane a woman known
as "Rosy Emma," reputed wife of the yeoman of
the halter, was selling a third identical noose to
the Epping buttermen, who had come that morning
to Newgate Market.
The execution, in the year 1807, of two men,
named Haggerty and Holloway, for the murder
in November, 1802, of Mr. Steel, a lavender-merchant in the Strand, led to a frightful catastrophe.
The body of the murdered man was found in a
gravel-pit between Hounslow and Staines, the head
crushed in by the blow of a bludgeon. Nothing
could be discovered of the offenders till the
beginning of 1807, when Hanfield, a convict at
Portsmouth, confessed that he had helped in the
murder, and disclosed the names of his two accomplices. One of these men, Haggerty, was a
marine on board the Shannon frigate, then lying in
at Deal; the other, Holloway, a thief, was then
lying in Clerkenwell Prison. The informer's story
was this:—The robbery had been planned at the
"Black Horse and Turk's Head," Dyot Street,
Bloomsbury, whence the three men had started
together to Hounslow Heath. The doomed man
came at the time expected, and they knocked
him down. While they were searching him a
night-coach appeared, and Mr. Steele struggled to
get across the road. Holloway then called out,
"I'll silence the beggar," and killed him with two
furious blows of a bludgeon. The evidence of
this man was much doubted at the time. He had
been a hackney-coachman, and a thief, and had
deserted from several regiments; and it was proved
that he had been heard to say, that rather than
bear seven years at the hulks, he would hang as
many men as were killed at the battle of Copenhagen. In the court, the two men, who were
found guilty, pleaded their innocence, and the last
act of Holloway, in the press-yard, was to fall on
his knees, and declare before God that he was
innocent. Haggerty also protested his innocence,
but without going on his knees. On the day of
execution some 80,000 people assembled. Even
before the prisoners appeared, several women were
trampled to death. At the end of Green Arbour
Court, a pieman and his basket being upset, many
persons fell and perished. One poor woman,
feeling herself lost, threw an infant at her breast to
a bystander, who passed it on and on, till it was
placed safely under a cart. In one part of the
crowd seven persons died from suffocation alone.
A cart, overladen with spectators, broke down,
and many of those who were in it were trampled
to death. Nothing could be so horrible as this
fighting crowd, mad with rage and fear. Till the
gallows was removed, and the marshals and constables cleared the street, nothing could be done
for the sufferers. Twenty-eight persons were killed
and nearly seventy injured in this brutal struggle.
The execution of the Cato Street conspirators
before Newgate, on Monday, May 1, 1820, was
one of the most ghastly scenes ever witnessed by
a London mob. Thistlewood, the leader of this
conspiracy, had been in the Marines. His companions were James Ings, a butcher; Richard
Tidd, a bootmaker; William Davidson, a cabinetmaker; John T. Brunt, and others. They had
agreed to take advantage of a dinner at the Earl
of Harrowby's, in Grosvenor Square, to which all
the cabinet ministers had been invited, to break in
and murder them all. Ings had resolved that the
heads of Lords Castlereagh and Sidmouth should
be cut off and put in two bags provided for the
purpose; and he particularly wished to preserve
the right hand of Lord Castlereagh as a valuable
curiosity. The cannon in Gray's Inn Lane and
the Artillery Ground were to be captured, the
Mansion House taken, the Bank sacked, the
barracks fired, and a Provisional Government
established. Pikes and guns had been collected,
and hand-grenades made. The conspirators were
discovered in a loft in Cato Street, Edgware Road.
Smithers, about the first police-officer who entered,
was run through with a sword by Thistlewood, and
a desperate struggle then ensued. At this moment
Captain Fitzclarence (son of the Duke of Clarence)
arrived, with a party of the Coldstream Guards,
and captured nine of the conspirators. Thistlewood was taken the next day, at a house in Little
Moorfields.
At the trial eleven of the conspirators were
sentenced to death, but six of these were afterwards respited. Thistlewood, Ings, Brunt, Tidd,
and Davidson were executed. The Government
had shown the utmost anxiety to prevent a riot or
a rescue. Life Guards were stationed in the Old
Bailey, Newgate Street, and Ludgate Hill, and one
hundred artillerymen and six pieces of artillery
were placed in the centre of Blackfriars Bridge.
The scaffold was lined with black cloth, and near
the drop were five plain coffins, and a block for
the decapitation of the criminals. Thistlewood
was the first to ascend the scaffold. He was collected and calm, and bowed twice to the crowd.
When Mr. Cotton exhorted him to pray, and asked
him if he repented of his crime, he exclaimed,
several times, "No, not at all!" and was also heard
to say, "I shall soon know the last grand secret."
Tidd ran up the steps, and bowed on all sides.
There was a slight cheering when he appeared,
in which he made a faint attempt to join. Ings
seemed mad with excitement. He moved his head
to and fro, cried "Huzza!" three times, and commenced singing, "Oh, give me death or liberty!"
There was partial cheering. He exclaimed, from
time to time, "Here we go, my lads! You see the
last remains of James Ings. Remember, I die the
enemy of tyranny, and would sooner die in chains
than live in slavery." When the chaplain exhorted
him, the reckless ruffian said, with a coarse laugh, "I
am not afraid to go before God or man." Then he
shouted to the silent executioner, "Now, old man,
finish me tidy. Pull the halter a little tighter: it
might slip." He then waved a handkerchief three
times, and said he hoped the chaplain would give
him a good character. Davidson, a man of colour,
who had just received the sacrament, prayed with
great fervency, and expressed penitence for his
crimes. All he said was, "God bless you all!
Good-bye!" and after the Lord's Prayer, he exclaimed, "God save the king!"
Brunt, the last who came out, requested some
bystander to get him some snuff out of his pocket,
as his hands were tied. He took it with great
coolness, and said he wondered where the gaoler
would put him, but he supposed it would be somewhere where he should sleep well. He would
make a present of his body to King George the
Fourth.
Thistlewood, just before he was turned off, said
in a low tone to a person under the scaffold, "I
have now but a few moments to live, and I hope
the world will think that I have at least been
sincere in my endeavours." At the last moment,
Tidd cried out to Ings, "How are you, my
hearty?"
At a signal given by the Rev. Mr. Cotton the
platform fell. At the very instant Ings was observed
to join Davidson in prayer. Half an hour after, a
"resurrection-man," who received a fee of twenty
guineas, disguised in a rough jacket and trousers,
and a mask on his face, appeared with an amputating-knife, and severed Thistlewood's head
from his body. The hangman's man then held up
the head by the hair, and exclaimed three times,
"This is the head of Arthur Thistlewood, a traitor."
The same ceremony was then performed with skill
on Tidd, Ings, Davidson, and Brunt. The mob
loudly hissed, and there was a deep groan from the
crowd, and shrieks from the women, when Thistlewood's head was removed. When the conspirators
appeared on the scaffold, the troops were ordered
as close as possible to the scene of execution; but
no disorder took place. Five of the remaining
conspirators were transported for life.
The execution of Fauntleroy, the great banker,
of 6, Berners Street, took place at Newgate, in
1824. It was supposed that this man, by forged
powers of attorney, had disposed of about £400,000
worth of Bank of England stock; the Bank, however, prosecuted for only £170,000 worth. Such
was Fauntleroy's audacity, that it is said he would
sometimes forge the name of a man with whom he
was conversing, and then send it, still wet, into the
clerks' room, to show that it had just been written
by his visitor. Singularly enough, a tin box was
found in his possession, with a list of the greater
part of his frauds, and this formal statement at the
bottom of all:—"In order to keep up the credit of
our house, I have forged powers of attorney for
the above sums and parties, and sold out to the
amount here stated, and without the knowledge of
my partners. I kept up the payments of the dividends, but made no entries of such payments in
our books. The Bank began first to refuse to discount
our acceptances, and destroy the credit of our house.
The Bank shall smart for it." It was known that
Fauntleroy was an epicure and a voluptuary, but
his hospitality had won many friends, and no one
doubted his honour. He attributed his losses to
building speculations. He denied embezzling one
shilling. Sixteen respectable witnesses vouched
for his honour and integrity. The crowd at his
execution, on the 30th of November, was unprecedented. Every window and house-roof near Newgate was crowded with well-dressed men. Nothing
had been seen like the mob since Thistlewood
and his gang were decapitated. When the sheriffs
entered the banker's cell, at a quarter before eight,
he lifted his eyes sadly, bowed, but said nothing.
The felon was still a gentleman. He was dressed
in a black coat and trousers, with silk stockings,
and dress shoes. He was perfectly calm and composed. The terrible procession formed quickly.
Two friends gave him their arms, and he followed
the sheriffs and the Rev. Mr. Cotton, the ordinary
of Newgate. The moment he appeared every hat
was taken off. Two minutes more, and his body
swayed in the thick November air.
Only two other executions for forgery ever took
place in England; and in 1837 the capital punishment for that crime was abolished. The late Mr.
Charles Dickens used to relate an anecdote of the
last moments of Fauntleroy. His elegant dinners
had always been enriched by some remarkable and
matchless curaçoa. Three of his boon companions
had a parting interview with him in the condemned
cell. They were about to retire, when the most
impressive of the three stepped back, and said,
"Fauntleroy, you stand on the verge of the grave.
Remember the text, my dear man, that 'we brought
nothing into this world, and it is certain we can
take nothing out.' Have you any objection, therefore, to tell me now, as a friend, where you got
that curaçoa?"
It was long rumoured in London, of course
absurdly, that Fauntleroy, by means of his vast
wealth and acquaintance, had bribed the hangman
to slip a silver tube down his throat, which saved
his life. More resolute people declared he had
escaped to America, and had actually been seen
in Paris. So legends, even in our own days,
spring up and take root.
The murder of a poor Italian boy, by a bodysnatcher named Bishop, and another scoundrel
called Williams, excited the utmost horror and
alarm in London, in the year 1831. Upwards of
30,000 persons assembled to witness their execution, on the 5th of December, at Newgate. These
men had decoyed the poor boy to a hovel in Nova
Scotia Gardens, Bethnal Green, and had then
drugged him with rum and laudanum, and drowned
him in a well. At King's College they had asked
twelve guineas for the body, and Bishop owned to
having sold from 500 to 1,000 bodies, and to two
other murders. The "Fortune of War" public-house,
in Giltspur Street, seems to have been the rendezvous of these monsters. A great many persons
were maimed and bruised at these executions, and
the moment the murderers were turned off, the
barriers between the gallows and Ludgate Hill
were simultaneously broken asunder and torn up
by the crowd.
In 1837 the execution of James Greenacre lent
an additional horror to Newgate. This man had
murdered Hannah Brown, a woman to whom he
had been engaged to be married, and had then cut
the body in pieces, and hidden portions of it in
various parts of London, the trunk being placed in
a sack, and concealed behind some flagstones, near
the "Pine Apple" toll-bar, Edgware Road. He
confessed at last that Hannah Brown had deceived
him, by pretending to have property, and that one
night, when she called at his lodgings, in Carpenters' Buildings, Lambeth, she laughed at her
trick. In a rage at this, he struck her with a silkroller a blow which proved mortal, and he then
formed the resolution of cutting up and concealing the body.
The night of the execution of this wretch, hundreds of persons slept on the steps of the prison
and of St. Sepulchre's Church, and boys remained
all night clinging to the lamp-posts. The crowds
in the streets spent the night in ribald jokes and
drunken scuffles. Greenacre, when he passed to
the gallows, was totally unmanned. He could not
articulate the responses to the ordinary, and was
obliged to be supported, or he would have fallen.
His last words, with a look of contempt at the
yelling and hissing crowd, were, "Don't leave me
long in the concourse."

CATO STREET. (From a View published in 1820.)
Another of the celebrated executions at Newgate
was that of Franz Müller, a young German tailor,
in 1864. This man, in order, it is supposed, to
obtain money to get to America, murdered a Mr.
Briggs, in a carriage on the North London Railway,
between Bow station and Hackney Wick. The
murdered man's hat, watch, and chain had been seen
in the possession of the murderer, who had fled to
New York. Müller denied his guilt to the last.
The night before the execution there was a most
disgraceful scene round Newgate. The houses
commanding a sight of the drop were filled with
spectators, who paid for places, at prices ranging
from five or seven shillings to a couple of guineas
a head. In some instances a first-floor was let for
£12. The visitors (not always of the lower description) spent the night playing at cards and
singing choruses. To one of the exhortations to confession from those who visited him, Müller turned
away, with the remark, "Man has no power to forgive sins, and there is no use in confessing them
to him." As he approached the gallows he looked
up at the chain with perfect self-possession. The
final conversation with the German minister of the
Lutheran Church in Alie Street, Goodman's Fields,
was to the following effect:—
Dr. Cappel: Müller, in a few moments you will stand
before God. I ask you again, and for the last time, are you
guilty, or not guilty?
Müller: Not guilty.
Dr. Cappel: You are not guilty?
Müller: God knows what I have done.
Dr. Cappel: God knows what you have done. Does He
also know that you have committed this crime?
Müller: Yes, I have done it.
Dr. Cappel was actually leaning forward and
listening when the drop fell. The Germans of
London had exerted themselves warmly to obtain
a reprieve for Müller, and even the King of Prussia
telegraphed to the Queen to request her intervention to save Müller's life.
The execution of François Benjamin Courvoisier,
a Swiss valet, found guilty of the murder of his
master, Lord William Russell, took place at Newgate
in 1840. Lord William, who was in his seventy-third year, lived alone in his house, in Norfolk
Street, Park Lane, his establishment consisting of
two women-servants and Courvoisier, a Swiss valet.
On the morning of the murder the housemaid,
rising as usual, found the papers in her master's
writing-room scattered about, and in the hall an
opera-glass, a cloak, and some other articles of
dress wrapped up, as if ready to be carried off.
She instantly went up-stairs and called Courvoisier,
who was almost dressed, and he at once ran
down, saying, "Some person has been robbing;
for God's sake go and see where his lordship is!"
They went into the room, and found Lord William
on his bed murdered, and his head nearly severed
from his body. When the policeman came, and
asked Courvoisier to assist him, he fell back in a
chair, and said, "This is a shocking job. I shall
lose my place, and lose my character." The premises having been searched, two bank-notes for
£10 and £5, supposed to have been taken from
Lord Russell's box, and several rings, were found
concealed behind the skirting-board of the butler's
pantry. Suspicion at once fell on Courvoisier;
and on being tried and found guilty, he confessed
the murder. He said that, disliking his place, he
stole some plate, and had subsequently resolved to
rob the house. Then before midnight his master
found him in the dining-room, and suspected him
of theft. On Lord William's return to his room, the
thought of murder first entered Courvoisier's mind.
His character was gone, and he said he thought the
only way to cover his fault was the murder of his
master. He went into the dining-room, and took
a carving-knife from the side-board. He then went
up-stairs and opened his master's bed-room door.
There was a rushlight burning, and Lord William
was asleep. Courvoisier accomplished the murder,
the old man never speaking a word, and only
moving his arm a little. Courvoisier then opened
a Russia leather case, took several things, and
also a £10 note, which he hid behind the skirtingboard. After he had committed this foul murder,
Courvoisier went to bed, as usual, having first
made marks on the outer door, as if there had
been thieves there. The execution of Courvoisier
took place on the 6th of July, 1840. His constant
exclamation in prison had been, "O God! how
could. I have committed so dreadful a crime? It
was madness. When I think of it I can't believe
it." He also confessed that he had contemplated
self-destruction. Upwards of 20,000 persons had
gathered to witness the murderer's end. Several
hundreds had waited all night at the debtors'
door of the Old Bailey, and high fees had been
paid for windows, and even the roofs of the houses
opposite Newgate were crowded. There was a
sprinkling of women and boys in the crowd, and a
distinguishable number of men-servants. As the
bell began to toll, at five minutes to eight o'clock, the
vast multitude uncovered, and at two minutes after
the hour Courvoisier ascended the steps leading to
the drop, followed by the executioner and the ordinary of the prison. A few yells were uttered, but
the mass of the spectators were silent. Courvoisier's
step was steady and collected, his face pale, but calm
and unmoved. When on the drop he waved his
bound hands up and down two or three times, and
this was the only visible symptom of emotion.
When the noose was adjusted, he lifted up his
hands to his breast, as if in fervent prayer. He
died without any violent struggle, his raised hands
gradually sinking. His counsel, Mr. C. Phillips,
was afterwards much blamed for trying to prove
the police guilty of conspiracy, to obtain the large
reward, when, as it was said, Courvoisier had already
confessed to him his guilt; but the confession of
Courvoisier was really of a much later date.

MRS. BROWNRIGG. (From the Original Print.)
There is still an old print extant (of which we
give a copy on page 457), representing that cruel old
hag, Mrs. Elizabeth Brownrigg, in the condemned
cell at Newgate. This celebrated murderess, who
was nearly torn to pieces by the mob, on her way
to Tyburn, was a parish midwife, living in Flower-de-Luce Court, Fetter Lane. Her cruelties to her
apprentices we have before related.
Of the cruelties of the old press-yard we have
a terrible instance, in the case of Edward Burnworth, in 1726. This man, a most daring highwayman and murderer, having refused to plead, was
loaded with boards and weights. He continued an
hour and three minutes, with a mass of metal upon
him weighing three hundred, three quarters, and
two pounds. He then prayed he might be put to
the bar again, which the court granted, and he was
arraigned, and pleaded "not guilty." He was, however, found guilty, and received sentence of death.
There is an interesting story of Mr. Akerman,
one of the old governors of Newgate, with whom
Boswell contracted a friendship. On one occasion,
says Boswell, a fire broke out in Newgate. The
prisoners were turbulent and in much alarm. Mr.
Akerman, addressing them, told them there was no
fear, for the fire was not in the stone prison; and
that if they would be quiet, he then promised to
come in among them, and lead them to a further
end of the building; offering, in addition, not to
leave them till they were reassured, and gave him
leave. To this generous proposal they agreed. Mr.
Akerman then, having first made them fall back
from the gate, lest they should be tempted to break
out, went in, closed the gate, and, with the determined resolution of an ancient Roman, ordered the
outer turnkey upon no account to unbar the gate,
even though the prisoners should break their word
(which he trusted they would not), and by force
bring him to order it. "Never mind me," said he,
"should that happen." The prisoners then peaceably followed him though passages of which he
had the keys, to a part of the gaol the farthest from
the fire. Having, by this judicious conduct, says
Boswell, fully satisfied them that there was no immediate risk, if any at all, he then addressed them:
"Gentlemen, you are now convinced that I told
you true. I have no doubt that the engines will
soon extinguish this fire. If they should not, a
sufficient guard will come, and you shall be all
taken out and lodged in the compters. I assure
you, upon my word and honour, that I have not a
farthing insured. I have left my house that I
might take care of you. I will keep my promise,
and stay with you, if you insist upon it; but if you
will allow me to go out and look after my family and
property, I shall be obliged to you." Struck with
his courage, truthfulness, and honourable sense of
duty, the felons shouted: "Master Akerman, you
have done bravely. It was very kind of you. By
all means go and take care of your own concerns."
He did so accordingly; and they remained, and
were all preserved. Dr. Johnson said of this man,
whom Wellington would have esteemed: "Sir, he
who has long had constantly in view the worst
of mankind, and is yet eminent for the humanity
of his disposition, must have had it originally in
a high degree, and continued to cultivate it very
carefully."
Great good was effected in Newgate by the
Ladies' Prison Visiting Association, which commenced its labours among the female prisoners of
Newgate in 1817. The Quakers had originated
the movement, and it soon produced its effects.
Mrs. Fry was the indefatigable leader of these
philanthropists. The female prisoners in Newgate,
before the good work began, were idle, abandoned,
riotous, and drunken. There was no attempt at
general inspection; the only distinction was between the tried and the untried. They slept promiscuously in large companies. Frequent communication was allowed them, through an iron grating,
with visitors of both sexes, many of them more
degraded and desperate than themselves. The
good effected was rapid and palpable. The worst
women became quiet, orderly, and industrious;
the whole of them grew neater and cleaner;
many learned to read; others sat for hours knitting
with the ladies who visited Newgate. Two of the
committee, if possible, visited the prison daily, and
observed the cases of the individual prisoners.
The prisoners' patchwork, spinning, and knitting
were sold for them, and, if possible, part of their
earnings was put by, to accumulate for their benefit
when they returned to the outer world. Schools
were started for the children and the grown-up
women. The governesses were chosen from the
most intelligent, steady, and persevering of the
prisoners. A careful system of supervision was
also established. Over every twelve or thirteen
women a matron was placed, who was answerable
for their work, and kept an account of their conduct. A ward woman attended to the cleanliness
of the wards. A yard woman maintained good
order in the yard, and the sick room was ruled by
a nurse and an assistant. These managers were all
prisoners, selected from their orderly and respectable habits, and these situations became the best
badge for good conduct. The female prisoners
assembled every day in the committee-room, to
hear the Bible read, or a prayer delivered, by the
matron or one of the visitors. The women, on
being dismissed, says Mr. J. J. Gurney, returned
to their several employments, with perfect order and
obedience. The women grew very honest among
themselves. In no less than 100,000 manufactured
articles of work not one article was stolen. The
best proof of amelioration was the fact of the
great decrease of re-commitments between 1817
and 1819. Many of the women kept under supervision by the committee preserved good characters
as servants, or earned an honest livelihood at
home. Several of the women, on discharge, received small loans, to help them on, and these
loans they repaid by most punctual weekly instalments. At the end of 1817, Sir T. F. Buxton
obtained a return of the re-commitments on the
male side of Newgate, and it appeared that out of
203 men 47 of those convicted had been confined there before within the two previous years.
The returns on the female side, since the Ladies'
Association had reformed the prison, were not
more, as compared with the male side, than as
4 to 47. It had at one time been as 3 to 5.
Can anything more be said to prove what a great
good women may effect, who look upon female
prisoners not as brute beasts, to be punished and
despised, but as souls, to be won back and reclaimed? They softened these women's hearts, and
tenderly restored them to humanity. The object
of justice, in their eyes, was to reform, not merely
to punish. Hence the kind look did more than
the lash—the soft word than the hard fetter. The
good work has, since those days, been carried
further, and there is still much to do.
The first memorable escape from Newgate was
that of Jack Sheppard, a thievish young London
carpenter, in 1724. This hero of modern thieves
(mischievously immortalised by Mr. Harrison Ainsworth) had been condemned to death with a rogue
named Blueskin, for stealing cloth from a Mr.
Kneebone, a draper in the Strand, to whom Sheppard had formerly been apprenticed. The whole
story of his adventures shows the loose discipline of
Newgate at the time. Considering the lad was a
practical carpenter and locksmith, and probably
bribed the gaolers heavily, we see no great miracles
in his escapes, which only needed cleverness, knowledge of wood and iron work, and steady perseverance. On the first occasion Jack, during an
interview with two female friends in the lodge
at Newgate, broke a spike off the hatch, and, by
the assistance of the two women, being slim and
flexible, was pulled through the opening, and so
escaped. Retaken at Finchley, the angry turnkeys
gripped the young thief with handcuffs, loaded him
with heavy irons (such as are still fastened above
the side doors of the prison), and chained him to
a stout staple in the floor of a strong room called
"The Castle." There people of all ranks came to
see him, and all gave money to the young lion of
the hour, but extreme care was taken that no sympathisers should pass him a chisel or a file. Jack
was, however, eager for notoriety, and resolute to
baffle the turnkeys. He chose a quiet afternoon,
when most of the keepers were away with their
amiable charges at the Old Bailey Sessions. With
a small nail he had found he loosened his chain
from the floor-staple, then slipped his small thievish
hands through his handcuffs, and tied up his fetters
as high as he could with his garters. With a piece
of his broken chain he worked out of the chimney
a transverse iron bar that stopped his upward progress. The keepers smoked and drank, and left
Jack alone with mischief. Once on the airy roof,
Jack, quick at breaking out of prisons, now tried
his hand at breaking in, for, to force a way to the
chapel, Jack broke into the Red Room, over the
Castle, having found a large nail, with which he
could work wonders. The Red Room door had
not been unbolted for seven long years. Jack
forced off the lock in seven short minutes, and got
into a passage leading to the chapel. To force a
strong bolt here, he broke a hole through the wall,
and, with an iron spike from the chapel door,
opened a way between the chapel and the lower
leads. Three more doors flew open before him;
over a wall, and he was on the upper leads. At
this crisis, requiring a blanket, to tear up and
make a rope for his descent, he had the courage
to go back for it, all the way to his cell, and then,
making a tough rope, he fastened it with the chapel
spike, and let himself down on the leads of a
turner, who lived adjoining the prison. Slipping
in at a garret window, he stole softly down-stairs,
and let himself out (a woman who heard his irons
clink thought it was the cat). Passing the watchhouse of St. Sepulchre, he went up Gray's Inn
Lane, and hid himself in a cow-house, near Tottenham Court. The next day he bribed a shoemaker
to procure him a smith's hammer and a punch, and
rid himself of his irons, the last souvenirs of Newgate. A few nights after, this incorrigible scamp
broke into a pawnbroker's shop in Drury Lane,
stole a sword and some coats, snuff-boxes, rings,
and watches, and rigged himself out in black, with
ruffled shirt, diamond ring, silver-hilted sword, gold
watch, and other suitable garnishings. Two nights
afterwards, getting drunk with his mother near his
old haunts, the young thief was seized and thrown
again into Newgate, no more to escape. Sir James
Thornhill painted his portrait in prison, and, after
an unsuccessful plot to rescue him at Turnstile,
he was hung at Tyburn. An opera and a farce
were founded upon his adventures, and a preacher
in the City is said to have thus spiritualised his
career:—
"Now, my beloved, what a melancholy consideration it is, that men should show so much
regard for the preservation of a poor, perishing
body, that can remain at most but a few years, and
at the same time be so unaccountably negligent of a
precious soul, which must continue to the ages of
eternity! Oh, what care, what pains, what diligence, and what contrivances are made use of for,
and laid out upon, these frail and tottering tabernacles of clay, when, alas! the nobler part of us is
allowed so very small a share of our concern, that
we scarce will give ourselves the trouble of bestowing a thought upon it.
"We have a remarkable instance of this in a
notorious malefactor, well known by the name of
Jack Sheppard. What amazing difficulties has he
overcome! what astonishing things has he performed, for the sake of a stinking, miserable carcase, hardly worth hanging! How dexterously did
he pick the padlock of his chain with a crooked
nail! How manfully burst his fetters asunder,
climb up the chimney, wrench out an iron bar,
break his way through a stone wall, and make the
strong door of a dark entry fly before him, till he
got upon the leads of the prison! And then, fixing
a blanket to the wall with a spike, how intrepidly
did he descend to the top of the turner's house, and
how cautiously pass down the stairs, and make his
escape at the street-door!
"Oh, that ye were all like Jack Sheppard! Mistake me not, my brethren; I don't mean in a carnal,
but a spiritual sense; for I purpose to spiritualise
these things. What a shame it would be, if we
should not think it worth our while to take as
much pains, and employ as many deep thoughts,
to save our souls, as he has done to preserve his
body! Let me exhort you, then, to open the locks
of your hearts with the nail of repentance; burst
asunder the fetters of your beloved lusts; mount
the chimney of hope, take from thence the bar of
good resolution; break through the stone wall of
despair, and all the strongholds in the dark entry of
the valley of the shadow of death; raise yourselves
to the leads of divine meditation; fix the blanket of
faith with the spike of the Church; let yourselves
down to the turner's house of resignation, and
descend the stairs of humility. So shall you come
to the door of deliverance from the prison of
iniquity, and escape the clutches of that old executioner, the devil, who 'goeth about like a roaring
lion, seeking whom he may devour.'"
The condition of things in ancient Newgate was
deplorable. When the contagious fever broke out,
there were no less than 800 prisoners crowded
within the walls. It was not till 1810 that, through
the exertions of Sir Richard Phillips, a Committee
of the Common Council passed a resolution for
building a new prison for debtors, and in 1815 the
debtors were transferred from Newgate to the Giltspur Street Compter. In a Parliamentary Report of
1814, the following statement appeared of the way
in which the chaplain's duties were performed:—
"Beyond his attendance at chapel, and on those
who are sentenced to death Dr. Ford feels but few
duties to be attached to his office. He knows
nothing of the state of morals in the prison;
he never sees any of the prisoners in private.
Though fourteen boys and girls from nine to thirteen
years old were in Newgate in April last, he does
not consider attention to them a point of his duty.
He never knows that any have been sick till he
gets a warning to attend their funeral; and does
not go to the infirmary, for it is not in his instructions." The prisoners were allowed to drink
and gamble, and their amusement was the repeating
stories of past villany and debauchery. "I scruple
not to affirm," says Howard, "that half the robberies committed in and around London are
planned in the prisons by that dreadful assemblage
of criminals, and the number of idle people who
visit them." Those who refused to associate with
the criminals were submitted to mock trial, in
which the oldest thief acted as judge, with a towel,
tied in knots on each side of his head, for a wig;
and he had officers to put his sentences into execution. "Garnish," "footing," or "chummage,"
was demanded of all new prisoners. "Pay, or
strip," was the order; and the prisoner without
money had to part with some of his clothes, to
contribute towards the expense of a revel, the older
prisoners adding something to the "garnish" paid
by the new comer. The practice of the prisoners
cooking their own food had not been long discontinued in 1818.
Even in 1836 the Inspector of Prisons found
fault with the system within the prison. The prisoners were allowed to amuse themselves with
gambling, card-playing, and draughts; sometimes
they obtained, by stealth, says a writer in Knight's
"London," the luxury of tobacco, and a newspaper.
Sometimes they could get drunk. Instruments to
facilitate prison-breaking were found in the prison.
Combs and towels were not provided, and the
supply of soap was insufficient. In their Report
of 1843, the inspectors say, "It has been our painful
duty, again and again, to point attention to the
serious evils resulting from gaol association, and
consequent necessary contamination in this prison.
The importance of this prison, in this point of view,
is very great. As the great metropolitan prison for
the untried, it is here that those most skilled in
crime of every form, those whom the temptations,
the excesses, and the experience of this great city
have led through a course of crime to the highest
skill in the arts of depredation, and the lowest
degradation of infamy, meet together with those
who are new to such courses, and who are only
too ready to learn how they may pursue the career
they have just entered upon with most security
from detection and punishment, and with greater
success and indulgence. The numbers committed
(nearly 4,000 per annum), which are still increasing,
render this a subject of still greater moment."