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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

NED BONNET

Took to the Highway because he was ruined by a Fire.
Executed at Cambridge Castle in March, 1713

EDWARD BONNET was born of very good and
reputable parents in the Isle of Ely, in Cambridge-
shire, who bestowed some small education upon him, as
reading, writing and casting accounts. He set up as a
grocer in the country, being at one time worth above six
hundred pounds. He was ruined by a fire, which burned
all his goods and house to the ground; and not being in
a condition to retrieve his loss he came up to London, to
avoid the importunate duns of creditors, where, lighting
into a gang of highwaymen, he took to their courses, to
raise himself, if possible, once more. Having been upon
several exploits, wherein he was successful, the sweet
profit of his enterprises made him so in love with robbing
on the highway that he devoted himself wholly to it, and

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committed above three hundred robberies, particularly in
Cambridgeshire, insomuch that he was much dreaded by
the people in that country.
   One time Ned Bonnet, in a rencounter on the road, met
with the misfortune of having his horse shot under him ;
whereupon he was obliged to follow his trade on foot till
he could get another. But it was not long before he took a
good gelding out of the grounds of a man who since kept
the Red Lion Inn in Hounslow upon which, riding
straight into Cambridgeshire, a gentleman one day over
took him on the road who was like to have been robbed.
Hearing Ned Bonnet to be tuning something of a psalm,
he thereupon took him to be a godly man, and desired his
company to such a place, to which he said he was also going
(for a highwayman is never out of his way, though he is
going against his will to the gallows). But at length, Ned,
coming to a place convenient for this purpose, obliged the
gentleman to stand and deliver his money; which being
above eighty guineas, he had the conscience to give him
half a crown to bear his charges till he had credit to recruit
himself again. This gentleman ever after could not endure
the tune of a psalm, and had as great an aversion against
Sternhold, Hopkins, Tate and Brady as the devil has to
holy water.
   At length one Zachary Clare, whose father kept a baker's
shop at Hackney, being apprehended for robbing on the
highway and committed to Cambridge Jail, to save his own
bacon made himself an evidence against Ned Bonnet, who,
being secured at his lodging in Old Street, was sent to
Newgate, and remaining till the assizes held at Cambridge,
before Mr Baron Lovet, was carried down thither, and
executed before the castle, on Saturday, the 28th of March,
1713, to the general joy and satisfaction of all the people
in that country.
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Newgate Calendar Vol. II Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar