The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

JACK BLEWIT

Was taken into Slavery by the Blacks on Pirates' Island.
After gaining his Liberty and returning to England
he became a Highwayman. Executed in 1713
for the Murder of a Farmer's Daughter

JOHN BLEWIT was born near Bull Inn Court, in the
Strand. His father was a shoemaker, and bred him
up to the same trade. But he had not been bound above
three years before the old man died, and Jack soon after
became too headstrong for his mother to manage him. As
he advanced in years, so did he in vice. In the reign of
King James II. he changed what little he had of the Protes-
tant religion for about the same quantity of the Roman
Catholic, being in hopes of getting himself promoted by this
compliance with the times. He entered under the Earl of
Salisbury against the Prince of Orange, by which means
he got a horse, and he was a professed lover of riding. But
he did not long continue in this military station, for upon
King William's accession to the throne this newly raised
regiment, being mostly Papists, was presently disbanded,
and he was put to new shifts to get his bread.
    He was resolved to try if he could better his fortune at
sea; so going on board a ship bound for Guinea, sailing
to Old Calabar, they entered the river called the Cross
river, into Pirates' Island, where, after they had taken in
their negroes, and were ready to sail, the master called up
the boatswain, and three men more, one of whom was Jack,
to look out the copper bars that were left, and carry them
on shore to sell. The boatswain with his small company
desired they might have arms, not believing the inhabitants
were so harmless a people as reported. They took with them
three muskets and one pistol, and so rowed towards the
shore; but unhappily their match fell into the water, and
the ship being fallen down lower towards the sea, and they
ashamed to go back without dispatching their business,
Jack went ashore to the first house to light the match.

[226]

Before he was twenty rods from the water side he was
seized on by half a score of blacks, or rather tawny Moors,
and by them hauled half a mile up into the country, and
thrown with great violence upon his belly, and so com-
pelled to lie till they had stripped him. In the meantime,
more company coming, they were so eager for his poor
canvas apparel that some they tore off, and some they cut
off, and therewith several pieces of his flesh, to his intoler-
able pain, and with those rags they made themselves little
aprons.
    Whilst all this was being done, Jack's clothing being very
scarce there, his comrades made the best of their way back
again to their ship, telling the captain what had befallen them,
in having Jack taken from them by savage natives. Blewit
was now sold to a master, who was free to discourse, after
he had learned in less than three months the Tata language,
which is easily attained, being comprehended in few words,
and all the negroes speak it. After being four months in
the country his master presented him to the King of the
Buccaneers, whose name was Esme, who immediately gave
him to his daughter Onijah. When the King went abroad
Jack attended him as his pagc of honour throughout the
whole circuit of his dominions, which was not above twelve
miles; yet his Majesty boasted exceedingly of his power
and strength, and gloried extremely that he had a white
man to attend him, whom he employed to carry his bows
and arrows.
    During all the time Jack was a slave to this prince he
never knew him to go abroad and come home sober. But
after two months' service the King of Calanach, called
Mancha, hearing of this white, courted his neighbour
prince to sell him, and accordingly he was sold, for a cow
and a goat. This king was sober, free from the debaucheries
and mischiefs the other was subject to, and would often
inquire of him concerning the head of his country, and
whether the kingdom he was of was bigger than his own,
whose whole dominions were not above twenty five miles
in length and fifteen miles in breadth.

[227]

    Jack told as much as was convenient, keeping within the
bounds of modesty, yet relating as much as possible to
the honour and dignity of his Queen, informing him of the
greatness of one of her kingdoms, the several shires and
counties it contained, with the number of its cities, towns
and castles, and strength of each, the infinite inhabitants,
and valour of her subjects ; which so amazed this petty
prince that he needed to mention no more of her Majesty's
glory and dignity. It put him into such a profound con-
sternation that he resolved to find out some way to tender
his respects to this mighty princess, and could study none
more convenient than that if he could find a passage he
would let him go to England, to inform Queen Anne of
the great favour and respect he had for her, and carry her
a present, which should be two cabareets, or goats, which
they value at a high rate, this king himself having not
above seventeen or eighteen.
    Though our captive lived happily with this prince, yet
his desires and hopes were still to return to his native
country. At length he promised him that the first English
ship wich came into the roads should have liberty to release
or purchase him. This much rejoiced Jack's heart, and he
now thought every day a year till he could hear or see some
English ship arrive. The ship came in, the commander
whereof was Captain Royden, who had put in there for
negroes. The day after his arrival the King let Jack go,
sending him in a canoe, placed between a negro's legs,
with others to guide this small vessel, for fear he should
leap overboard and swim to the ship. At a distance he
hailed her in English, to the great surprise of those within
her. The negroes let him stand up and show himself to
the captain, to whom he gave an account of his slavery;
and being redeemed for five iron bars, he was taken on
board, where the seamen charitably apparelled him (for he
was naked) and brought him safe to England, after fourteen
months' slavery.
    Jack being back home again was resolved never to ven-
ture his carcass again at sea. Deciding to try his fortune on

[228]

the highway, he stole a horse out of a field by Marylebone.
Still wanting a saddle, pistols and other accoutrements, he
was obliged to sell the horse to buy all materials to make
him a complete highwayman, and proposed to steal another.
To Smithfield he rides to make the best market he could,
but he had scarce rode a turn or two before the owner came
up and challenged his horse; so poor Jack, being appre-
hended, and carried before a magistrate, was committed to
Newgate.
    When he was tried, being condemned, he most earnestly
begged the Court to show him mercy, by transportation,
or any other punishment but death. As it was his first
crime, and the prosecutor had his horse again, it was his
good luck to obtain a reprieve, and to plead to a pardon,
too, within three or four months after his confinement.
    Jack now being at liberty again, he was put to his trumps
how to live; and though he was unsuccessful in his first
attempt at thieving, he would yet venture a second time,
resolving now to lose the horse or win the saddle. But his
thoughts not aspiring to great matters, as they did at first,
he was resolved to try how Fortune would smile on his
adventures on the footpad; so one evening, going over
Clapham Common, he overtook a gentleman riding softly
along, whom unawares he knocked off his horse, by giving
him an unlucky blow under his ear, which killed him. He
fell to rifling him, and took from him forty guineas and a
gold watch worth twenty guineas more. When he had
done this, putting one of the deceased's feet into one of
the stirrups, the horse dragged him up and down the
Common an hour or two before he was taken up. At last,
being carried to a house, and the coroner sitting on his
body, the inquest brought in his death to be occasioned
by accidentally falling off his horse, though he had lost
his watch and money, which they supposed were dropped
out of his breeches by the position he was in, of his head
downwards, whilst he was dragged about the Common.
    Having thus by this complicated piece of villainy lined
his pockets, Jack. made the best of his way to Yorkshire,

[229]

where, after clothing himself, he bought a horse, sword and
pistols, and then sought out for new adventures on the
road. In Hertfordshire, overtaking a farmer's daughter,
he shot her through the head and robbed her of fourteen
pounds in money, which she had that day received for her
father. The same evening he put up at an inn at Ware,
whither a hue and cry coming shortly after, he was taken
up on suspicion, having some spots of blood on one of
the lapels of his coat ; and being struck then with a
remorse of conscience, he confessed the murder, and was
forthwith carried before a Justice of the Peace, who, after
a long examination, committed him to Hertford Jail. To
drive away sorrow from his breast he got drunk every
day until the time of his trial, which was in the Lent
Assizes, 1713, when he was condemned for his life.
When he was carried to the place of execution he confessed
having committed the murder on Clapham Common, as
before related, and then, after many devout ejaculations, he
was turned off, in the forty-fifth year of his age.

[230]


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