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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume II

MICHAEL VAN BERGHEN, CATHERINE
VAN BERGHEN AND DROMELIUS,
THEIR SERVANT, PUBLICANS

Executed 10th of July, 1700, for the Murder of their
Guest, Mr Oliver Norris

THESE criminals were natives of Holland, who, hav-
ing settled in England, kept a public-house in East
Smithfield in 1700, and where Geraldius Dromelius acted
as their servant. Mr Oliver Norris was a country gentle-
man who lodged at an inn near Aldgate, and who went
into the house of Van Berghen about eight o'clock in the
evening, and continued to drink there till about eleven.
Finding himself rather intoxicated, he desired the maid-
servant to call a coach to carry him home. As she was going
to do so her mistress whispered to her, and bade her return
in a little time and say that a coach was not to be procured.
These directions being observed,  Norris, on the maid's
return, resolved to go without a coach, and accordingly took
his leave of the family; but he had not gone far before he
discovered that he had been robbed of a purse containing
a sum of money; whereupon he returned and charged
Van Berghen and his wife with having been guilty of the
robbery. This they positively denied, and threatened to
turn him out of the house; but he refused to go, and re-
solutely went into a room where the cloth was laid for supper.
At this time Dromelius entered the room, and threatening
Mr Norris in a cavalier manner, the latter resented the insult,
and at length a quarrel ensued. At this juncture, Van
Berghen seized a poker, with which he fractured Mr Norris's
skull, and in the meantime Dromelius stabbed him in
different parts of the body, Mrs Van Berghen being present
during the perpretation of the horrid act. When Mr Norris
was dead they stripped him of his coat, waistcoat, hat, wig,
etc., and then Van Berghen and Dromelius carried the body
and threw it into a ditch which communicated with the
Thames; and in the meantime Mrs Van Berghen washed

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the blood of the deceased from the floor of the room. The
clothes which had been stripped from the deceased were
put up in a hamper and committed to the care of Dromelius,
who took a boat and carried them over to Rotherhithe,
where he employed the waterman to carry the hamper to
lodgings which he had taken, and in which he proposed
to remain until he could find a favourable opportunity of
embarking for Holland. The next morning, at low water,
the body of a man was found, and several of the neighbours
went to take a view of it, and endeavoured to try if they could
trace any blood to the place where the murder might have
been committed; but not succeeding in this, some of them
who were up at a very early hour recollected that they had
seen Van Berghen and Dromelius coming almost from the
spot where the body was found, and remarked that a light
had been carried backwards and forwards in Van Berghen's
house. Upon this the house was searched; but no discovery
was made, except that a little blood was found behind the
door of a room which appeared to have been lately mopped.
Inquiry was made after Dromelius, but Van Berghen and
his wife would give no other account than that he had left
their service. On which they were taken into custody, with
the servant-maid, who was the principal evidence against
them. At this time the waterman who had carried Dromelius
to Rotherhithe, and who knew him very well, appeared, and
he was likewise taken into custody. The prisoners were
tried by a jury of half Englishmen and half foreigners, to
circumstances above mentioned appeared so
striking that they did not hesitate to find the prisoners
guilty, and accordingly they received sentence of death.
   They were executed near the Hartshorn brewhouse, East
Smithfield, being the nearest convenient spot to the place
where the murder was committed, on the 10th of July, in the
year 1700. The bodies of the men were hung in chains
between Bow and Mile End, but the woman was buried.

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