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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

WILLIAM JONES (ALIAS GOODWIN) AND
JOHN BARBER

Two Highwaymen caught at the same Robbery and
&executed together on 26th of July, 1693

THESE two malefactors were executed at Tyburn on
Wednesday, the 26th of July, 1693, for the same
fact, which was robbing one Mr Salter, of Stoke, in
Buckinghamshire. They had both been great offenders
before, according to their age, though abundance of their
robberies are not recorded.
   William Jones, alias Goodwin (which latter was said to
be his right name, though he went by the former), was born
in Gloucestershire, at a village near Campden, called West-
on Subedge. He was kept at school till sixteen years of age,
with one Mr Taylor, whom he was like to have killed with
a pistol. At their breaking up at Christmas the boys had
shut their master out of the school in the midst of their
diversion, and refused him entrance. Mr Taylor upon this
endeavouring to force open the door upon them, Jones dis-
charged a bullet through the keyhole and narrowly missed
his breast.
   Complaint being made to his father of this misdemeanour,
he was severely corrected and removed to another school,
the master of which was called Bedford, with whom he
continued about two years more. He now thought himself
too old to be restrained, and requested his parents to take
him home; which was done, according to his desire.
   Some time after this he had a small estate left him by his

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grandfather, which made him still more desirous of being
fully his own master; to which also his indulgent father
consented, and promoted his liberty (if marriage may not
rather be called a slavery) by matching him to a fortune as
good as his own. The woman, however, not proving so
good as she should do, a sense of her ill-usage made him
extravagant. He now abandoned himself wholly to excesses.
He had one night a small quarrel in company, when he
made no more to-do but pull out his sword and stab the
person who gave the affront to the very heart. A dread of
the consequences of this murder made him get off as fast
as he could, and the want he was in of a maintenance, when
he was from home, and durst not send to his friends, made
him take to the highway, where he committed a great many
robberies.
   In particular, he robbed the Worcester and Bridgnorth
stage-coaches several times over, and within the compass
of a few days stopped a great number of passengers, horse
and foot, upon Sarney Downs, near Winchester. His reign
was not very long, but no man ever was more industrious
to improve the little time that his fortune permitted him to
go on in his villainies.
   John Barber was born at Chard, in Somersetshire,
from whence, coming up to London when he was very
young, he got into a gentleman's service, and lived,
among others, with Dr Boorne, at the Two Twins, in
Moorfields, where he was detected in cheating his master
of small sums of money, and turned out of doors for the
knavery.
   When he was out of place he took to gaming, at which
he soon lost all his unjust gains, and whatever else he had
saved. The same persons that won his money put him into
a way to get more, by going out with them on the footpad.
He was concerned in all the robberies that were committed
by this gang from the time of his entering among them
till he joined himself with Jones, and had more than once
been guilty of murder, particularly at a gardener's at
Fulham, whose house he broke open.

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   Jones and Barber had not been long united before they
came to the fatal union at Tyburn already mentioned. The
only facts they had been concerned in together, that we have
heard of, were the breaking open the houses of four or five
farmers about Eversley and Blackwater, out of one of which
they took a hundred and thirty pounds in gold and silver,
and in another took away the life of one who attempted to
resist them in their enterprise.
   When they were under sentence of death for Mr Salter's
robbery they both behaved in a very indecent, or rather
impudent, manner. At the place of execution they gave a
great many ill words to the ordinary, who desired them to
be serious in their last moments, and consider that they
were going to appear before God to give an account of
their actions. Just as they were going to be turned off Jones
cried out: " What a sad, wicked, silly dog have I been to
bring myself into this devilish scrape ! Well, it is a dismal
thing, for all our jesting, to be hanged up by the neck,
and not to know where we are to be the next quarter of
an hour !" Jones was twenty-six and Barber twenty-four
years of age.

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