The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

DICK BAUF

Who executed his own Parents, and from a Pickpocket
became a Cat Burglar, and then a Highwayman.
Executed at Dublin, 15th of May, 1702

THIS insolent offender was born in the kingdom of
Ireland. At twelve years of age he had the wide
world to shift for himself in, his parents being then forced
to swing for their lives on a piece of cross timber, where
they had the misfortune to have their breath stopped. Their
crime was only breaking open and rifling a house, and
murdering most of the family. Dick was present at the
action, and contributed towards it as much as he was able,
but found mercy at the assizes on account of his youth.
Some say he was pardoned only on the hard condition of
being executioner to his own parents, and that he was at
first very unwilling to take away the lives of those who gave
him his, but consented at last, when he found that there
was no excuse that such a worthy family might not be
entirely cut off by one single act of justice. It is added that
on the same consideration his father and mother persuaded

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him to the action, and gave him their blessing at the hour
of their departure, assuring him that they had much rather
die by his hands than by the hands of a stranger, since
they were sure of his prayers in their last moments. These
words afforded great consolation to young Richard, and
enabled him to get through the work with a Christian
fortitude.
   Being now left an orphan, young, helpless and alone, he
determined to look out for some gentleman whom he might
serve in the quality of a skip-kennel, or some handicrafts-
man of whom he might learn a trade, for his support in
an honest way. But all his inquiry was in vain ; for the
lamentable exit of his parents, and the occasion of it, being
fresh in everyone's memory, their infamy rested on him, and
there was no man to be found who would receive him into
his house.
   Being as yet unfit to engage in any great and hazardous
enterprise, he took up the decent occupation of a pick-
pocket, at which he soon became very dexterous, haunting
all the fairs, markets, and even churches, round the country,
and in this manner picking up a very good living; till, being
often detected, and obliged to go through the discipline of
the horse-pond, he was obliged to think of some other order
of sharpers in which to get himself entered.
   There is in Ireland a sort of men whom we may properly
enough call satyrs, from their living in woods and desert
places; among these Dick Bauf was next enrolled. These
people never came to any towns, but continued in their
private holds, stealing horses, kine, sheep and all sorts of
cattle that came in their way, on which they subsisted. But
all these inferior orders soon became tiresome to our adven-
turer, the more on account of the bad success he met with
whilst he was in them. The next, then, therefore, was to get
acquainted with a gang of Grumeis, who take their name
from the similitude of their practice to that of the young
boys who climb up to the tops of the masts at sea with great
activity, and are called cats, or Grumeis, by the sailors. The
thieves that bear this name are housebreakers who make

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use of a ladder of ropes, with hooks in one end of it, by
which they easily ascend to the chamber windows, having
fastened their ladders with a long pole. These robbers were
very common in Dick Bauf's time, and did a world of
mischief both in town and country, doing all with so much
expedition that they more frequently escaped than other
housebreakers, yet commonly with as large booties of gold,
silver, linen and everything that came to hand as anybody
at all. When they had done their work their method was
to pull a string which was fastened to the end of the hooks,
and so raise them, upon which the ladder fell without
leaving any marks behind it.
   Next he got into a crew of wool-drawers, whose trade is
to snatch away cloaks, hats or perukes from towners - a very
sly sort of theft, practised only in the night, the greatest
part of their cunning lying in the choice of a proper oppor-
tunity. They go always in companies, three or four together,
about nine or ten at night, most commonly on dark rainy
evenings, which are generally the most favourable to their
practice. The places they choose are dark alleys and pass-
ages where a great many people come along, and there is
a facility of escaping by a great many ways; which they do
to prevent their being surprised by the neighbours if those
that are robbed should cry out, as they frequently do. But
Dick Bauf was at last taken in one of these pranks also, and
burned in the hand for it at Galway; upon which he grew
weary of the lay. He was, moreover, now a man full grown,
very lusty and able-bodied; which determined him to take to
the highway. He was not long in making provision for this
new course; and, being in every particular well accoutred
for it, he proceeded in as intrepid and insolent a manner
as ever fellow did. All the four provinces of Ireland were
scarce large enough for him to range in, and hardly afforded
occasions enough for him to make proof of his courage
as much as he desired. Night and day he pursued his
villainies, and practised them on all ranks and degrees-
rich and poor, old and young, man, woman and child
were all the same to him. For he was as impartial as

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Death, and altogether as inexorable, being never softened
to pity.
   He was so notoriously remarkable for the daily robberies
he committed on the Mount of Barnsmoor that no person
of quality would venture to travel that way without a very
large retinue. In a word, he kept his residence in this place
till, by an order of the Government, there was a guard-
house built on the middle of it; and the regiments lying at
Coleraine, Londonderry, Belfast and other garrisons in the
north of Ireland were obliged to detach thirty or forty men
thither, under a sergeant and a corporal, and to relieve them
monthly, on purpose to secure the passengers who travelled
that way from being interrupted by this audacious robber.
   These measures obliged him to shift his quarters and
reside about Lorras. In the end, such grievous complaints
of his frequent outrages were made to the Government by
so many people that a proclamation was issued for the appre-
hending of him, with the promise of five hundred pounds'
reward to him who could do the State this signal piece of
service; for, in short, he began to be looked upon as a
dangerous person to the whole kingdom. This great sum
caused abundance of people to look out for him, and among
others were several who had often had a fellow-feeling with
him, by being employed to dispose of what he stole. Bauf
was so enraged when he heard of this that he vowed revenge;
which he thus executed.
   Some of these persons daily travelled a by-road about
business. As he knew their time of passing, he one day
waylaid them and stopped them singly as they came, tying
them neck and heels and putting them into an old barn by
the roadside. When he had by this means got nine or ten
together, he set the barn on fire and left them to be consumed
with it; which they all were, without remedy.
   This inhuman action was soon discovered by the persons
being missed and the bones that were found in the rubbish;
whereupon, finding the country too hot to hold him, he fled
in disguise to Donaghadee, took shipping, and escaped to
Portpatrick, in Scotland, from whence he designed to have

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gone to France. But lighting on a public-housc where
there was a handsome landlady he got familiar with her,
which occasioned him to stay longer than he intended, and,
indeed, too long for him ; for the husband, at last observing
the freedom that our rover took with his wife, caused him
to be apprehended, in a fit of jealousy, having before a
suspicion who he was.
   When he was carried before a magistrate all circumstances
appeared against him ; so that he was sent back under a
strong guard to Ireland, where he was soon known. Being
committed to Newgate, in Dublin, and shortly afterwards
condemned, it is said he offered five thousand pounds for
a pardon, being worth twice the sum. But all proving
ineffectual, he was executed at Dublin, on Friday, the 15th
of May, 1702, aged twenty-nine years. His body was
afterwards hanged in chains on Barnsmoor Mount, in the
province of Ulster.

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