The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

RICHARD COLEMAN

Who was executed on Kennington Common, in Surrey, 
12th of April, 1749, for a Murder he did not commit1

RICHARD COLEMAN was indicted at the assizes 
held at Kingston, in Surrey, in March 1749, for the 
murder of Sarah Green, on the 23rd of July preceding; 
when he was capitally convicted. 
   Mr Coleman had received a decent education, and was 
clerk to a brewer at the time the affair happened which cost 
him his life; and had a wife and several children, who were 
reduced to accept the bounty of the parish, in consequence 
of his conviction. 
   The murdered person was Sarah Green, who, having 
been with some acquaintances to a beanfeast in Kennington 

1 This man's innocence was fully established in 1751, when James Welsh
and Thomas Jones confessed that they committed the crime. See p. 208.

[166]

Lane, stayed to a late hour, and on her return towards 
Southwark she met with three men, who had the appearance 
of brewers' servants, two of whom used her in so inhuman 
a manner as will bear no description. 
   Such was the ill-treatment she had received that it was 
two o'clock in the morning before she was able to reach her 
lodgings, and on the following day was so ill that she in- 
formed several people how she had been treated; on which 
she was sent to St Thomas's Hospital. 
   While in the hospital she declared that the clerk in 
Taylor's (then Berry's) brew-house was one of the parties 
who had treated her in such an infamous manner; and it 
was supposed that Coleman was the person to whom she alluded. 
   Two days after the shocking transaction had happened, 
Coleman and one Daniel Trotman called at the Queen's Head 
ale-house, in Bandy-Leg Walk, when the latter was perfectly 
sober, but the former in a state of intoxication. Having 
called for some rum-and-water, Coleman was stirring it 
with a spoon when a stranger asked him what he had done 
with the pig -- meaning a pig that had been lately stolen in 
the neighbourhood. Coleman, unconscious of guilt, and con- 
ceiving himself affronted by such an impertinent question, 
said: " D-n the pig, what is it to me? " 
   The other, who seems to have had an intention to ensnare 
him, asked him if he did not know Kennington Lane. 
Coleman answered that he did, and added: " D-n ye, 
what of that?" The other then asked him if he knew 
the woman that had been so cruelly treated in Kennington 
Lane. Coleman replied: " Yes," and again said: " D-n 
ye, what of that? " The other man asked: " Was not you 
one of the parties concerned in that affair?" Coleman, who, 
as we have said, was intoxicated, and had no suspicion of 
design, replied: " If I had, you dog, what then? "-and 
threw at him the spoon with which he was stirring the 
liquor. A violent quarrel ensued; but at length Coleman 
went away with Trotman. 
   On the following day, Coleman calling at the Queen's 

[167]

Head above mentioned, the landlord informed him how 
imprudently he had acted the preceding day. Coleman, 
who had been too drunk to remember what had passed, 
asked if he had offended any person; on which the landlord 
informed him of what had happened, but the other, still 
conscious of his innocence, paid no regard to what he said. 
   On the 29th of August, Daniel Trotman and another 
man went before Mr Clarke) a magistrate in the Borough, 
and charged Coleman on suspicion of having violently 
assaulted and cruelly treated Sarah Green, in the Parsonage 
Walk, near Newington Church, in Surrey. 
   The magistrate, who does not seem to have supposed 
that Coleman was guilty, sent for him and hired a man to 
attend him to the hospital where the wounded woman lay; 
and pointing out Coleman, he asked her if he was one of 
the persons who had used her so cruelly. She said she 
believed he was, but, as she declined to swear positively to 
his having any concern in the affair, Justice Clarke admitted 
him to bail. 
   Some time afterwards Coleman was again taken before 
the magistrate, when, nothing positively being sworn against 
him, the justice would have absolutely discharged him, 
but Mr Wynne, the master of the injured girl, requesting 
that he might once more be taken to see her, a time was 
fixed for that purpose, and the justice took Coleman's word 
for his appearance. 
   The accused party came punctually to his time, bringing 
with him the landlord of an ale-house where Sarah Green 
had drunk on the night of the affair with the three men 
who really injured her; and this publican, and other people, 
declared on oath that Coleman was not one of the parties. 
   On the following day Justice Clarke went to the hospital 
to take the examination of the woman on oath. Having 
asked her if Coleman was one of the men who had injured 
her, she said she could not tell, as it was dark at the time; 
but, Coleman being called in, an oath was administered to 
her, when she swore that he was one of the three men that 
abused her. 

[168] 

 
   Notwithstanding this oath, the justice, who thought the 
poor girl not in her right senses, and was convinced in his 
own mind of the innocence of Coleman, permitted him to 
depart on his promise of bringing bail the following day to 
answer the complaint at the next assizes for Surrey; and he 
brought his bail, and gave security accordingly. 
   Sarah Green dying in the hospital, the coroner's jury 
sat to inquire into the cause of her death; and, having 
found a verdict of wilful murder against Richard Coleman 
and two persons then unknown, a warrant was issued to 
take Coleman into custody. 
   Though this man was conscious of his innocence, yet 
such were his terrors at the idea of going to prison on such 
a charge that he absconded, and secreted himself at Pinner, 
near Harrow-on-the-Hill. 
   King George 11. being then at Hanover, a proclamation 
was issued by the Lords of the Regency offering a reward of 
fifty pounds for the apprehension of the supposed offender ; 
and to this the parish of St Saviour, Southwark, added a 
reward of twenty pounds. 
   Coleman read the advertisement for his apprehension in 
the Gazette, but was still so thoughtless as to conceal him- 
self; though perhaps an immediate surrender would have 
been deemed the strongest testimony of his innocence. 
However, to assert his innocence, he caused the following 
advertisement to be printed in the newspaper :- 

   " I, Richard Coleman, seeing myself advertised in the 
Gazette as absconding on account of the murder of Sarah 
Green, knowing myself not any way culpable, do assert 
that I have not absconded from justice; but will willingly 
and readily appear at the next assizes, knowing that my 
innocence will acquit me." 

   Strict search being made after him, he was apprehended 
at Pinner, above mentioned, on the 22nd of November, and 
lodged in Newgate, whence he was removed to the New 
Jail, Southwark, till the time of the assizes at Kingston, 
in Surrey; when his conviction arose principally from the 

[169]

evidence of Trotman and the declaration of the dying 
woman. 
   Some persons positively swore that he was in another 
place at the time the fact was committed, but their evidence 
was not credited by the jury. After conviction Coleman 
behaved like one who was possessed of conscious innocence, 
and who had no fear of death for a crime which he had not 
committed. 
   He was attended at the place of execution by the Rev. 
Mr Wilson, to whom he delivered a paper in which he 
declared, in the most solemn and explicit manner, that he 
was altogether innocent of the crime alleged against him. 
He died with great resignation, lamenting only the distress 
in which he should leave a wife and children. 

[170] 


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