The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

WILLIAM BURK

After an adventurous Seafaring Life as a Boy he became a
Robber, and was executed at Tyburn on the 8th of
April, 1723

WILLIAM BURK was born in the parish of St
Catherine's, and near the Tower of London. Having
reached the eleventh year of his age, he was guilty of some
faults that required severe chastisement, which having re-
ceived, he ran away from school and went to the water side,
inquiring for a station on board a ship. A man observing
his inclination took him down to the Nore, and put him on
board the Salisbury man-of-war.
  The mother, learning where her darling boy had gone,
followed him on board the ship, and endeavoured to prevail
on him to return, but in vain, for the youth was obstinately
bent on a seafaring life.
  In about a fortnight the ship sailed for Jamaica, and
during the voyage had an engagement with a Spanish
galleon, which she took, after a bloody and obstinate fight,
in which young Burk was wounded. After this they met
with another galleon, which they took without the loss of

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a man , but a woman, the only one on board, having the
curiosity to look on the deck, lost her life by a chain shot,
which severed her head from her body. The common men
shared each fifteen pounds prize money on these captures,
but some of the principal officers got sufficient to make
them easy for life.
  The ship was stationed for three years in the West Indies,
during which time Burk learned the art of stealing every
thing that he could secrete without detection. At Jamaica
there was a woman who had been transported from New-
gate some years before, but having married a planter, who
soon died, she was left in affluent circumstances, and took
a tavern. Wanting a white servant, she prevailed on the
captain to let Will attend her customers.
  The boy was pleased with his new situation, and might
have continued in it as long as he was on the island, but
he could not refrain from defrauding his mistress; but
she herself had been a thief, and soon detected him.
Thereupon he fell on his knees and begged pardon, which
was granted; but he was ordered to depart the house
immediately.
  Alarmed at the danger from which he had escaped he
seems to have formed a temporary resolution to live honestly
in future, and with that view shipped himself for Maryland,
where a merchant would have employed him but the captain
he sailed with would not permit him to accept the offer.
Hence he made a voyage to the coast of Guinea, where he
had a very narrow escape of being murdered by the natives,
who killed several of his shipmates.
  On the return of his ship from Guinea to England the
weather was so bad that they were five months on their
voyage, to the port of Bristol, during which they suffered
innumerable hardships. Their provisions were so reduced
that they were almost famished, the allowance of each man
for the whole day being not so much as he could eat at two
mouthfuls; and at length they were obliged to fast five days
successively.
  However they reached the port in safety; and, notwith-

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standing the miseries they had endured, the captain resolved
on another voyage to Guinea, in which Burk accompanied
him. Having purchased a number of slaves they set sail
for the West India islands, but during the voyage the
negroes concerted a scheme to make themselves masters of
the ship, and would probably have carried it into execution
but that one of their associates betrayed them ; in conse-
quence of which they were more strictly confined than they
had hitherto been.
  Burk sailed from the West Indies to England, where he
entered on board a man of war and sailed up the Baltic,
and afterwards to Archangel, to the north of Russia, where
his sufferings from the extremity of the cold and other cir-
cumstances were so severe that on his return to England he
determined to abandon the life of a sailor.
  Being now quite out of all honest methods of getting
his bread, he took to robbing passengers in and near
Stepney; but he continued his depredations on the public
only for a short time, being apprehended for committing
the fourth robbery.
  He was indicted at the sessions held at the Old Bailey
in February, 1723, for robbing William Fitzer on the
highway, and again, on the same day, for robbing James
Westwood; and being found guilty on both indictments
he received sentence of death.
  There was something remarkably cruel in the conduct
of this malefactor, for he carried a hedge bill with him, to
terrify the persons he stopped; and one old man hesitating
to comply with his demand, he cut him so that he fell to
the ground.
  After conviction he became sensible of the enormity of
his crimes, received the Sacrament with great devotion, and
declared that if he obtained mercy from God it must be
through the merits of Jesus Christ.
  He was executed at Tyburn, on the 8th of April, 1723,
in the twenty third year of his age.

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