The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

JACK GOODWIN ALIAS PLUMP

A young but expert Thief, who was executed at Tyburn in I 706 for Burglary

WHEN silver tankards were more in vogue in the ale
houses than they are at present, this fellow, going
into one to drink, called for a tankard of ale, which being
brought, he drank it off, and having cut out the bottom of
it, paid the victualler for his liquor, who, seeing the tankard
on the table, had no suspicion that any damage had been
done it. But shortly after some other company came in,
and the tapster, running into the cellar to fill for them the
tankard which Mr Goodwin had been fingering, wondered
to see the cock run and the tankard never the fuller, where-
upon, turning it up, he could find no more bottom in it
than mariners can in the ocean.
   Another time Jack Goodwin, being in the country as far
as Durham, and destitute of money, happened to meet
with another idle companion, with whom he made a bar-
gain to beg their way up to London; and in order to excite
people's pity the more, his new companion was to act the
part of a blind man, and he was to be his guide, instead of
a dog and a bell. So getting a pennyworth of cereing wax,
with which tailors cere the edges of silk and slight stuffs,
Jack Goodwin, mollifying it over a candle, daubed his
comrade's eyelids therewith, insomuch that he could not
open them.
   Our couple, thus proceeding on their journey, had, by
their cruising or begging through the counties, picked up
about the sum of four pounds, sixteen shillings; by that
time they had got up to Ware. Next, making the best of
their way up to London, within ten or eleven miles of the
same, having to cross a small brook over a narrow wooden
bridge, with a rail but on one side of it for the convenience
of foot passengers, when they were upon it Goodwin threw
his blind comrade into the water, where he stood up to the
neck, but moving neither one way nor the other, for fear of
being drowned. In the meantime his guide made straight
to London. Soon afterwards, some passengers coming by
took pity on the fellow, supposing him to be really blind ;
they helped him out of the brook, and setting him on terra
firma, he presently, by their directions, arrived at a house,
where, getting some warm water, he washed his eyelids,
and having got them opened he marched after his fellow
traveller to london, where he might hunt about long
enough before he found him out, for Jack had got into
some ill house or another, where he was as safe as a thief
in a mill.
   The Duke of Bedford visiting a person of quality one
night very late, whilst the footmen were gone to drink
at some adjacent boozing ken, or ale house, and the coach
man was taking a nap on his box, Jack Goodwin, coming
by at the same time with some of his thieving cronies, took
the two hind wheels off the coach and supported it up with
two pieces of wood, which they got out of a house which
was being built hard by. On his Grace not long after
going into his coach, and the footmen getting up behind in
a hurry, no sooner did the horses begin to draw but down
fell his Grace, footmen and all; who, looking to see how
the accident came, found the hind wheels were stolen ;
whereupon the Duke was obliged to go home in a hackney
coach.
   This John Goodwin, alias Plump, was condemned, when
he was but eleven years of age, for picking a merchant's
pocket of one hundred and fifty guineas, and was afterwards

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several times in great danger of his life before justice took
hold of him in earnest.
At last, committing a burglary in company with another,
when he was but eighteen years of age, he was apprehended
and carried before Sir Thomas Stamp, knight and alderman
of London, where, after he was examined, being searched,
several cords were found in his pocket; upon which his
Worship asked Goodwin of what trade he was. He replied:
"A tailor."
Then Sir Thomas, taking up the cords and looking sus-
piciously on them, quoth: "You use, methinks, very big
thread." " Yes, Sir" said Goodwin, " for it is generally
coarse work which I'm employed about."
Next searching his comrade, Henry Williams, a pistol was
found loaded in his bosom; upon which Sir Thomas asked
him also of what trade he was. He replied: "A tailor
too." "What! Both tailors?" said his Worship. "And
pray what implement is this belonging to your trade ?
Quoth Williams: " That pistol, Sir, is my needle case."
To conclude, Sir Thomas was so astonished at their
impudence that he immediately made out their mittimus for
Newgate, and being tried at Justice Hall, in the Old Bailey,
they were both condemned to die, and soon after executed,
at Tyburn, in I 706.


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