The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

WILLIAM BAKER

A City Merchant, executed at Tyburn,
31st of December, 1751, for forging an
East India Warrant in order to avoid Bankruptcy

WILLIAM BAKER was born in Cannon Street,
where his father kept a baker's shop, and lived in
good reputation. The youth was educated at the Merchant
Taylors' School, and at the usual age bound apprentice to
a grocer in a considerable way of business; and he proved
so faithful and diligent a servant that soon after the time of
his apprenticeship had expired his master admitted him an
equal partner in his trade.
   Having carried on the grocery trade for about seven years,
he declined that business and connected himself in partner-
ship with Mr Carter, a sugar-baker, and by this new under-
taking he flattered himself in  the expectation of speedily
acquiring a fortune.
   About the period of his commencing as sugar-baker he
married one of his cousins, who was the daughter of a
clergyman in Northamptonshire, and with her he received
a handsome fortune. For several years he fulfilled all his
engagements with the greatest punctuality, and was supposed
to be possessed of considerable property.
   He attended the sales of the East India Company's goods,
and frequently purchased very large quantities of teas, and
he had extensive dealings in other articles. But he often
sustained considerable loss by the sale of his goods, and his
circumstances at length became so embarrassed that he was
under apprehension that a commission of bankruptcy would
issue against him.
   He flattered himself, however, that, if he could support his
credit for a short time, matters would take a more favour-
able turn and his circumstances be retrieved. His anxiety
to avoid a bankruptcy induced Mr Baker to forge an East
India warrant for goods to the amount of nine hundred and
twenty-two pounds. But it must be remarked that the

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forgery was not committed with any intention to defraud,
but merely to raise a supply for present exigencies.
   Mr Baker passed the counterfeit warrant into the hands
of Mr Holland, who sent it to the India House, where
the forgery was detected, and Baker was in consequence
apprehended.
   Baker being put on his trial at the Old Bailey, several
gentlemen of reputation appeared on his behalf, and spoke
to his character in the most favorable terms; but both the
forgery and the uttering the counterfeit warrant having
been proved against him by indisputable testimony, and 
strongly corroborating circumstances, he of course was
condemned to suffer death.  Being conveyed to Tyburn in
a mourning-coach, he appeared to be in a composed state
of mind, and entirely resigned to his fate.

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