The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

GEORGE SEAGER

A Rogue of a Soldier, who deserted from Johnny Gibson's
Regiment and turned Burglar. Executed 27th of January, 1697

GEORGE SEAGER, aged twenty-six years at the time
of his death, was born at Portsmouth, in Hampshire,
where, his father and mother dying, his sister took care of
him for a while; but she, not being able to support herself,
left it to the parish to keep him, the overseers whereof
placed him out to spin packthread. After two years he left
that employment and went to a silk-throwster for a year and
a half, when, running away from his master, he took to bad
courses, being addicted to gaming, swearing, drunkenness
and theft; but a gang of the Ruby man-of-war pressing
him, he went on board that ship to sea, where, robbing the
seamen's chests, he was often whipped at the capstan, put
in the bilboes, and once keel-hauled. Keel-hauling a man is
tying a rope round his middle, to which two other ropes
are so fastened that, carrying him to the end of the main-
yardarm on the starboard-side of the ship, he is flung from

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thence into the water and hauled under the ship by a man
standing on the main-yardarm on the larboard-side, where
a gun is fired over the criminal's head as he is drawn up.
However, as no punishment would deter him from pilfering,
the captain of the ship, rather than be plagued with him,
put him ashore at Plymouth, from whence he begged his
way to Portsmouth, where he enlisted himself into Johnny
Gibson's Regiment, to whom he was a continual plague.
   The first time he mounted the guard, being put sentry
on the ramparts and ordered by the corporal not to let the
grand rounds pass without challenging, he said he would
take care of them, imagining that if he challenged them he
must fight them too. So the grand rounds going about at
twelve at night, with Johnny Gibson at the head of them,
Seager, who had got a whole hatful of stones by him, because
he chose to fight at a distance, cries out : " Who comes
there? " Being told they were the grand rounds---" Oh,
d---n ye! " quoth George, "the grand rounds, are ye?
Have at you then; for I have waited for you this hour
and above." So pelting them with stones as fast as he could
fling, the grand rounds could not pass any farther till they
called out to the captain of Lamport Guard, who sent the
corporal to relieve him, in order to his being examined;
but Johnny Gibson finding him to be a raw soldier, who
had never been on duty before, he escaped any punishment
inflicted on offenders by martial law.
   After this George also ran the gauntlet several times
for robbing the soldiers' barracks of victuals, linen or any-
thing else that he could find; but no punishment deterring
him from his pilfering tricks, he was in a draft sent over to
Flanders, where, going one day into a great church in
Brussels, he espied a Capuchin friar confessing a young
woman in a very private place; and as soon as the good
old Father had given absolution to his penitentiary, he made
up to him, under pretence of confessing his sins, for, as it
happened, the friar was an Englishman. But, instead of
confessing his manifold crimes, his intention was to commit
more; for, pulling a pistol out of his pocket and clapping

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it to his breast, quoth he : " Reverend Father, I perceived
the young gentlewoman, whom you just now confessed,
gave you something; but, let it be more or less, unless you
surrender it to me, who have most need of it, I will shoot
you through the heart, although I were sure to be hanged
this very moment for it.
   The friar, being much surprised at these dangerous
words, and deeming life sweet, gave him what he had got
from his female penitentiary, which was two louis d'or; then
binding him hand and foot, in a corner adjacent to his
confession box, he went away; and that same day, deserting
his regiment, he made the best of his way to England, where
he committed several most notorious burglaries in the cities
of London and Westminster, and the outparts thereof.
But at last being apprehended, and sent to Newgate, for
breaking open the house of the Lord Cutts and taking
from thence plate and fine linen valued at two hundred and
forty pounds, he was hanged at Tyburn, on Wednesday, the
27th day of January, in the year 1697.

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