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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

WILL HOLLYDAY

Captain of the Ragged Regiment of the Black Guards,
which Commission he threw up to take to the Highway.
Executed 22nd of December, 1697

WILLIAM HOLLYDAY was born of very poor
parents, in the parish of St Giles-in-the-Fields, who
dying when he was very young, he was forced to shift for
himself. Entering himself upon this in the ragged regiment
of the Black Guards, which in the reign of King Charles 11.
was in as great estimation as the janizaries in the Ottoman
Court, his acute genius and prompt wit, without the advan-
tage of any education, soon made him be taken notice of by
the superiors of his tattered fraternity.
   But that which gained Hollyday most reputation was
his being chosen Lord High Steward in a mock trial of
the Viscount Stafford, held in the Mews at Charing Cross;
in which, though he had not consulted Fortescue, Fleta,
Plowden, Coke upon Littleton, or any other ancient law
author, his natural parts most floridly set forth the heinous-
ness of that peer's crime, whose person was represented by
one of their tatterdernalions. But instead of executing the
poor boy in jest, he was hanged in earnest, and in that
pendent posture left till next morning; when one of the
king's grooms, finding his lordship hanging in the stable,
cut him down and delivered his dead body to his friends
to be decently interred.
   A little after this piece of mock justice was over, Will's
credit increasing more and more, by reason his ingenuity
was attended with a great deal of courage, he was, by the
unanimous consent of the whole regiment of the Black
Guards, chosen their captain ; in which post he behaved
himself with a great deal of prudence and circumspection,

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and by virtue of the great authority he bore among them
he brought them, nemine contradicente, to be conformable
to the following orders : --

   I. That none of the Black Guards should presume to wear
a shirt upon pain of being cashiered out of the regiment
for ever.
   II. That none of them should reside, either by day or
night, in any other places than stables, empty houses or
under bulks.
   III. That they should eat no victuals but what was given
them; therefore what money they got by cleaning Life
Guardsmen's boots or shoes, and rubbing down horses,
should either be lost or increased by gaming among their
own fraternity.
   IV. That if any of them could read or write they should,
by not practising either, forget both, like the Czar of
Muscovy, for their captain would not have any under his
command more learned than himself.
   V. That they should daily appear every morning by nine
of the clock on the parade in St James's Park, provided
they were not letted by sickness, or upon any extraordinary
duty, to receive the necessary orders which the present
exigency of affairs then required.
   VI. That none shall presume to follow the King and
Court to Windsor, or upon any Royal progress whatever,
but such as were commanded to go on that party.
   VII. That if any charitable person bestowed a pair of old
shoes or stockings upon any one of their ragged society, he
should presently convert the same into money to play.
   VIII. That they should not steal anything which lay out
of their reach, for fear of bringing a scandal on their regi-
ment.
   IX. That they should not endeavour to clear themselves
of vermin, by killing or eating them; nor for profit dispose
of them to any apothecary that might now and then want
a quillful or two to cure some lady's gentlewoman or
chambermaid of the yellow jaundice.
   X. That they should cant better than the best proficients

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of that language in Newgate; pick pockets without bung-
ling; outlie a Quaker; outswear a losing lord at the
Groom Porter's; and brazen out all their villainies with
the unparalleled impudence of an Irishman.
   In this employment Will Hollyday remained till he was
near twenty years of age, when looking upon himself as too
old to continue longer in that station, wherein he had be-
haved himself with a great deal of bravery, candour and
justice, he surrendered his commission and turned highway-
man; which profession he followed till the hangman provid-
ed for him, on Wednesday, the 22nd of December, 1697.

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