The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

JOHN HOLLIDAY OR SIMPSON

Housebreaker and Highwayman, who robbed a King at
Hertford, and a Church, and was hanged at Tyburn in 1700

THIS man, whose career of villainy in England was not
long, had committed a variety of depredations in Flanders,
where he served as a soldier under King William III. On
the Peace of Ryswick he received his discharge, and with
several of his confederates in acts of villainy repaired to
London, where they formed themselves into a gang of
robbers, of which Holliday, under the name of Simpson, was
appointed their captain. They were alternately highwaymen
and housebreakers.
   In the year 1700 Holliday was indicted in the name of
Simpson for a burglary in the house of Elizabeth Gawden,
of stealing thereout two feather beds and other articles ; to
which he pleaded guilty, and was, for that offence, hanged
at Tyburn.
   While under sentence of death he said that his name was
not Simpson, but Holliday, and that during a great part of
the war in the reign of King William he was a soldier in
Flanders, where he used to take frequent opportunities of
robbing the tents of the officers ; and once, when the army
lay before Mons, and his Majesty commanded in person,
Simpson happened to be one of those who were selected to
guard the Royal tent. On an evening when the King, accom-
panied by the Earl (afterwards Duke) of Marlborough and
Lord Cutts, went out to take a view of the situation of the
army, Simpson, with a degree of impudence peculiar to
himself, went into his Majesty's tent and stole about a
thousand pounds. It was some days before this money
was missed, and when the robbery was discovered, Simpson
escaped all suspicion. He said he had committed more
robberies than he could possibly recollect, having been a
highwayman as well as a housebreaker.
   He committed numerous robberies in Flanders as well
as in England, and he affirmed that the gates of the city of

[129]

Ghent had been twice shut up within a fortnight to prevent
his escape; and that when he was taken, his arms, legs,
back and neck were secured with irons; in which condition
he was carried through the streets, that he might be seen by
the crowd.
   Simpson and two of his companions used frequently to
stop and rob the Roman Catholics at five o'clock in the
morning as they were going to Mass ; he repeatedly broke
into the churches of Brussels, Mechlin and Antwerp, and
stole the silver plate from the altar.
   This offender further acknowledged that, having killed
one of his companions in a quarrel, he was apprehended,
tried and condemned for the fact by a court martial of
officers, and sentenced to be executed on the following day,
in sight of the army, which was to be drawn up to see the
execution. During the night, however, he found means
to escape, and took refuge in the Church of St Peter, in
Ghent, where the army then lay. Being thus in a place of
sanctuary, he applied to the priests, who made interest with
Prince Eugene; and their joint intercession with King
William, who arrived in the city about four days afterwards,
obtained his full pardon, and he was permitted immediately
to join the army.
   A few days after he had obtained his pardon he broke
into the church and robbed it of plate to the value of twelve
hundred pounds; which he was the better enabled to do as
he was acquainted with the avenues of the church and knew
where the plate was deposited. He was apprehended on
suspicion of this sacrilege; for as a crime of this kind is
seldom committed by the natives of the country it was
conjectured that it must have been perpetrated by some
one at least of the soldiers. And information being given
that two Jews had embarked in a boat on the Scheldt for
Middleburg, on the day succeeding the robbery, and that
Simpson had been seen in company with these Jews, this
occasioned his being taken into custody. But as no proof
arose that he had sold any plate to these men, it was thought
necessary to dismiss him.

[130]


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