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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume I

THOMAS BLOOD, GENERALLY CALLED
COLONEL BLOOD

Who stole the Crown from the Tower of London on
9th of May, 1671

THIS desperate man was the son of a blacksmith in
Ireland; but from other accounts his father appears to
have been concerned in iron-works, and to have acquired an
easy fortune in that kingdom. He was born about the year
1628, and came to England while a young man, and married,
in Lancashire) the daughter of Mr Holcraft, a gentleman
of good character in that county. He returned afterwards
into Ireland, served as a lieutenant with the Parliament
forces, and obtained an assignment of land for his pay;
besides which, Henry Cromwell put him into the Commis-
sion of the Peace, though scarcely twenty-two years of age.
These favours gave him such an inclination to the republican
party as was not to be altered ; and after the King's restora-
tion some accidents contributed to increase his disaffection
to the Government. Upon associating a little with the
malcontents, he found his notions exactly justified, and
that there was a design on foot for a general insurrection,
which was to be begun by surprising the castle of Dublin,
and seizing the person of the Duke of Ormond, then Lord
Lieutenant. Into this scheme he entered without any hesita-
tion ; and though many of the persons involved in the
dangerous undertaking were much his superiors in rank,
yet he was very soon at the head of the affair, presided in all
their councils, was the oracle in all their projects, and gener-
ally relied on in the execution of them. But, on the very
eve of its execution) the whole conspiracy, which had been
long suspected, was discovered, His brother-in-law, one
Lackie, a minister, was, with many others, apprehended,
tried, convicted, and executed; but Blood made his
escape, and kept out of reach, not withstanding the Duke
of Ormond and the Earl of Orrery laboured to have him
secured, and a proclamation was published by the former,

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with the promise of an ample reward for apprehending
him.
   He found means to get over into Holland, where he
was well received, and admitted into great intimacy with
some of the most considerable persons in the republic,
particularly Admiral de Ruyter. He went from thence to
England with such recommendations to the Fifth-Monarchy
Men, and other malcontents, that he was immediately
admitted into all their councils, and had a large share in
all the dark intrigues that were then carrying on for throwing
the nation again into confusion. In this situation he gave
another strong instance of his bold and enterprising genius;
but finding the Government apprised of their designs, and
foreseeing that the persons principally concerned could not
escape being apprehended, he resolved to withdraw into
Scotland, where he so wrought upon the discontents of the
people that he contributed not a little to the breaking out
of the insurrection there, and was present in the action of
Pentland Hills, 27th of November, 1666, in which the in-
surgents were routed and about five hundred killed. He
fled after this defeat back to England, and from thence to
Ireland, where he landed within three miles of Carrick-
fergus; but Lord Dungannon pursued him so closely that
he was obliged to retire into England. He had not been
long in this kingdom before he performed a fresh exploit,
which was as extraordinary, more successful, and made
greater interest in the world than anything he had yet
done. This was the rescue of his friend Captain Mason
from a guard of soldiers who were conducting him to
his trial at the assizes.1
   Whether his next enterprise was entirely of his own
contrivance is a point not to be decided; it was seizing the
person of his old antagonist, the Duke of Ormond, in the
streets of London; but whether with a view to murder, or
carry him off till he had answered their expectation, is not
perfectly clear. He actually put his design in execution on
6th of December, 167o, and was very near completing his
1See Appendix No. 4.

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purpose. However, the Duke was fortunately rescued out
of his hands; but himself and his associates escaped,
though closely pursued. An account of this transaction was
immediately published by authority, together with a Royal
Proclamation, offering a reward of one thousand pounds
for apprehending any of the persons concerned.
   The miscarriage of this daring design, instead of daunt-
ing him, or creating the least intention of flying out of the
kingdom, put him on another more strange and hazardous
scheme to repair his broken fortunes. He proposed to those
desperate persons who assisted him in his former attempt
to seize and divide amongst them the Royal Insignia of
Majesty kept in the Tower of London -- viz. the crown,
globe, sceptre and dove -- and as they were blindly devoted to
his service, they very readily accepted the proposal, and left
it to him to contrive the means of putting it into execution.
   He devised a scheme of putting himself into the habit of
a Doctor of Divinity, with a little band, a long false beard,
a cap with ears, and all the formalities of garb belonging
to that degree, except the gown, choosing rather to make
use of a cloak, as most proper for his design. Thus habited,
he, with a woman whom he called his wife, went to see the
curiosities in the Tower; and while they were viewing the
regalia the supposed Mrs Blood pretended to be taken
suddenly ill, and desired Mr Edwards (the keeper of the
regalia) to assist her with some refreshment.
   Mr Edwards not only complied with this request, but
also invited her to repose herself on a bed, which she did,
and after a pretended recovery took her leave, together
with Blood, with many expressions of gratitude.
   A few days after, Blood returned and presented Mrs
Edwards, the keeper's wife, with four pairs of white gloves,
in return for her kindness. This brought on an acquaint-
ance, which being soon improved into a strict intimacy, a
marriage was proposed between a son of Edwards and a
supposed daughter of Colonel Blood.
   The night before the 9th of May, 1671, the doctor told
the old man that he had some friends at his house who

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wanted to see the regalia, but that they were to go out of
town early in the morning, and therefore hoped he would
gratify them with the sight, though they might come a
little before the usual hour. [In this enterprise Blood had
engaged three accomplices, named Desborough, Kelfy and
Perrot.] Accordingly two of them came, accompanied by
the doctor, about eight in the morning, and the third held
their horses, that waited for them at the outer gate of the
Tower ready saddled. They had no other apparatus but
a wallet and a wooden mallet, which there was no great
difficulty to secrete.
   Edwards received them with great civility, and immedi-
ately admitted them into his office ; but as it is usual for
the keeper of the regalia, when he shows them, to lock
himself up in a kind of grate with open bars, the old man
had no sooner opened the door of this place than the doctor
and his companions were in at his heels, and without giving
him time to ask questions, silenced him, by knocking him
down with the wooden mallet. They then instantly made
flat the bows of the crown to make it more portable, seized
the sceptre and dove, put them together into the wallet, and
were preparing to make their escape when, unfortunately
for them, the old man's son, who had not been at home
for ten years before, returned from sea at the very instant;
and being told that his father was with some friends who
would be very glad to see him at the Jewel Office, he hastened
thither immediately, and met Blood and his companions
as they were just coming out, who, instead of returning
and securing him, as in good policy they should have done,
hurried away with the crown and globe, but not having
time to file the sceptre, they left it behind them.
   Old Edwards, who was not so much hurt as the villains
had apprehended, by this time recovered his legs, and cried
out murder, which being heard by his daughter, she ran
out and gave an alarm; and Blood and Perrot, making great
haste, were observed to jog each other's elbows as they went,
which gave great reason for suspecting them.
   Blood and his accomplices were now advanced beyond

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the main-guard; but the alarm being given to the warder
at the drawbridge, he put himself in a posture to stop their
progress. Blood discharged a pistol at the warder, who,
though unhurt, fell to the ground through fear; by which
they got safe to the little ward-house gate, where one Still,
who had been a soldier under Oliver Cromwell, stood
sentinel. But though this man saw the warder, to all appear-
ance, shot, he made no resistance against Blood and his
associates, who now got over the drawbridge and through
the outer gate upon the wharf.
   At this place they were overtaken by one Captain Beck-
man, who had pursued them from Edwards's house. Blood
immediately discharged a pistol at Beckman's head; but he
stooping down at the instant, the shot missed him, and he
seized Blood, who had the crown under his cloak. Blood
struggled a long while to preserve his prize; and when it
was at length wrested from him he said: "It was a gallant
attempt, how unsuccessful soever; for it was for a crown!”
   Before Blood was taken, Perrot had been seized by
another person; and young Edwards, observing a man that
was bloody in the scuffle, was about to run him through
the body, but was prevented by Captain Beckman.
   Upon this disappointment Blood's spirits failed him;
and while he remained a prisoner in the jail of the Tower
he appeared not only silent and reserved, but dogged and
sullen. He soon changed his temper, however, when,
contrary to all reason, probability, and his own expectation,
he was informed the King intended to see and examine him
himself. This was brought about by the Duke of Bucking-
ham, then the great favourite and Prime Minister, who
infused into his Majesty (over whom he had for some time
a great ascendancy) the curiosity of seeing so extraordinary
a person, whose crime, great as it was, displayed extra-
ordinary force of mind, and made it probable that, if so
disposed, he might be capable of making great discoveries.
He is allowed on all hands to have performed admirably
on this occasion. He answered whatever his Majesty
demanded of him clearly and without reserve; he did not

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pretend to capitulate or make terms, but seemed rather
pleased to throw his life into the King's hands by an open
and boundless confession. He took care, however, to pre-
possess his Majesty in his favour by various, and those
very different, methods. At the same time that he laid
himself open to the law he absolutely refused to impeach
others. While he magnified the spirit and resolution of the
party to which he adhered, and had always acted against
monarchy, he insinuated his own and their veneration for
the person of the King; and though he omitted nothing
that might create a belief of his contemning death, yet he
expressed infinite awe and respect for a monarch who had
condescended to treat him with such unusual indulgence.
   It was foreseen by the Duke of Ormond, as soon as he
knew the King designed to examine him, that Blood had no
cause to fear ; and indeed his story and behaviour made
such an impression on the mind of his Sovereign that he
was not only pardoned but set at liberty, and had a pension
given him to subsist on. This conduct of his Majesty
towards so high and so notorious an offender occasioned
much speculation and many conjectures.
   His interest was for some time very great at Court, where
he solicited the suits of many of the unfortunate people of
his party with success. But as this gave great offence to
some very worthy persons while it lasted, so, after the
disgrace and dissolution of the ministry styled the Cabal,
it began quickly to decline, and perhaps his pension also
was ill paid; for he again joined the malcontents, and acted
in favour of popular measures that were obnoxious to the
Court.
   In this manner he passed between nine and ten years,
sometimes about the Court, sometimes excluded from it,
always uneasy and in some scheme or other of an untoward
kind, till at last he was met with in his own way, and either
circumvented by some of his own instruments, or drawn
within the vortex of a sham plot, by some who were too
cunning for this master in his profession. It seems there
were certain people who had formed a design of fixing an

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imputation of a most scandalous nature upon the Duke
of Buckingham, who was then at the head of a vigorous
opposition against the Court, and who, notwithstanding he
always courted and protected the fanatics, had not, in respect
to his moral character, so fair a reputation as to render any
charge of that kind incredible. But whether this was con-
ducted by Colonel Blood, whether a counter-plot was set
on foot to defeat it and entrap Blood, or whether some
whisper thrown out to alarm the Duke, which he suspected
came from Blood, led his Grace to secure himself by a
contrivance of the same stamp, better concerted, and more
effectually executed, is uncertain ; but his Grace, who was
formerly supposed a patron of the colonel, thought it
requisite, for his own safety, to contribute to his ruin.
The notion Blood induced the world to entertain of this
affair may be discovered from the case which he caused to
be printed of it; but it fell out that the Court of King's
Bench viewed the affair in so different a light that he was
convicted upon a criminal information for the conspiracy,
and committed to the King's Bench prison; and, while in
custody there, he was charged with an action of scandalum
magnatum, at the suit of the Duke of Buckingham, in
which the damages were laid at ten thousand pounds.
Notwithstanding this, Colonel Blood found bail, and was
discharged from his imprisonment. He then retired to
his house in the Bowling Alley, in Westminster, in order
to take such measures as were requisite to free himself
from these difficulties; but finding fewer friends than
he expected, and meeting with other and more grievous
disappointments, he was so much affected thereby as to
fall into a distemper, that speedily threatened his life. He
was attended in his sickness by a clergyman, who found
him sensible, but reserved, declaring he was not at all afraid
of death. In a few days he fell into a lethargy, and on
Wednesday, 24th of August, 168o, he departed this life.
On the Friday following he was privately, but decently, in
terred in the new chapel in Tothill Fields. Yet such was
the notion entertained by the generality of the world of this

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man's subtlety and restless spirit, that they could neither be
persuaded he would be quiet in his grave, nor would they
permit him to remain so; for a story being spread that this
dying, and being buried, was only a new trick of Colonel
Blood's, preparatory to some more extraordinary exploit
than any he had been concerned in, it became in a few
days so current, and so many circumstances were added to
render it credible, that the coroner thought fit to interpose,
ordered the body to be taken up again on the Thursday
following, and appointed a jury to sit upon it. By the various
depositions of persons attending him in his last illness
they were convinced, and the coroner caused him to be
once more interred, and left in quiet.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. I Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar