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The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

GEORGE ANDERSON ALIAS JOHN EVERETT

Who picked Pockets at Newgate, became a
Highwayman, and was executed for stealing Ribbons,
31st December, 1750

JOHN EVERETT was a native of Hertford, in which
town he served his apprenticeship to a baker. The
young men in the neighbourhood declined associating with
him, and held him in universal abhorrence, so ungracious
were his manners and so strong was his propensity to
wickedness.
   Upon the expiration of his apprenticeship he connected
himself with a gang of notorious gamblers and other dis-
solute wretches, in conjunction with whom he perpetrated
a great number of villainies, but for several years escaped
the vengeance of the law.

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   By persuasions and the promise of a sum of money
Everett and a man named Wright induced a young
woman to make a charge of felony against two innocent
men, who were put on their trial, but happily acquitted,
as the perjured evidence was not able to authenticate
her accusation. In revenge for their failing to supply
the girl with the money they had promised she lodged
an information against Everett and Wright, who were
in consequence indicted for subornation of perjury, and
sentenced to stand in the pillory at the end of Chancery
Lane, where they received very severe treatment from the
populace.
   Soon after the above punishment had been inflicted
Everett was tried at Hicks's Hall, and sentenced again to
stand in the pillory, for having fraudulently obtained a
thirty-six-shilling piece. He was afterwards convicted of
having circulated counterfeit Portugal coin, and ordered to
be imprisoned for two years in Newgate.
   Soon after Everett's trial a company of gentlemen went
to Newgate to visit a criminal, and in a short time they
discovered that they had been robbed of their handkerchiefs.
The circumstance being mentioned to Everett, he pretended
to be much surprised, and intimated that there was but
little probability of the property being recovered. However
in a little time he produced the handkerchiefs, and received
some money from the gentlemen as a reward for his
supposed honesty.
   While he remained in Newgate he picked the pockets of
almost every person who came to visit the prisoners. He was
continually uttering the most reprobate speeches, and seemed
to delight in the practice of every species of wickedness.
Upon the expiration of the time he was sentenced to remain
in prison he found sureties for his good behaviour for two
years, and was discharged.
   Having stopped a young gentleman in Fleet Street, he
was asked if a robbery was intended, upon which he
knocked the gentleman down; but a large dog belonging
to the injured party immediately seized the villain, who,

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with great difficulty, disengaged himself just in time to
escape being secured by the watch.
   Everett and a woman of the town went to a small inn
at Hoddesdon, in Hertfordshire, which was kept by an old
widow, and being invited into a room behind the bar, after
having each drunk a glass of wine, the widow and her female
guest went to walk in the garden. In the meantime Everett
broke open a bureau and stole sixty pounds in cash and
several gold rings. They kept the widow in conversation
till the time of going to bed, in order to divert her from
going to the bureau, and the next morning decamped with
their booty. They took the road to Nottingham, whence
they crossed the country to Newmarket, and then returned
to London.
   Everett's numerous villainies had rendered his name so
notorious that he was fearful of being apprehended, and
therefore he went under the name of George Anderson,
and lived in a very private manner till the money he had
obtained was expended.
   He now procured a knife eighteen inches long, and
determined to levy contributions on passengers on the
highway. On the road between Kentish Town and Hamp-
stead he attempted to rob a countryman; but he being of
an intrepid temper a desperate contest ensued, in which
Everett proved the conqueror, and dangerously wounded
his antagonist, from whom he, however, obtained but a
small booty.
   At length he was detected in stealing a quantity of
ribbons in a shop in London, and was apprehended, but
not without making a vigorous resistance, in doing which
he dangerously wounded the shopkeeper in the face and
hands with a knife.
   For this crime he was tried at the Old Bailey, convicted,
and received sentence of death. The night after the warrant
for his execution arrived he laid a plan to escape. He was
furnished with implements for this purpose, and for saw-
ing off his fetters, by his wife and his kept mistress, who, on
this occasion, agreed. Being discovered, the former was sent

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to one of the compters, and his concubine to the other.
On this he behaved so insolently and outrageously that it
was necessary to chain him to the floor of his cell, where
he remained, blaspheming and threatening vengeance to the
keeper and turnkeys, until he was brought out for execution.

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