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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

THOMAS COLLEY

Executed 24th of April, 1751, for the Murder of People
who were reputed to be possessed of Witchcraft

0N the 18th of April, 1751, a man named Nichols
went to William Dell, the crier of Hemel Hempstead,
in Hertfordshire, and delivered to him a piece of paper,
with fourpence, to cry the words which were written on
the paper, a copy of which is as follows :--
   " This is to give notice that on Monday next a man and
a woman are to be publicly ducked at Tring, in this county,
for their wicked crimes."
   This notice was given at Winslow and Leighton Buzzard,
as well as at Hemel Hempstead, on the respective market-
days, and was heard by Mr Barton, overseer of the parish
of Tring, who, being informed that the persons intended
to be ducked were John Osborne and Ruth, his wife, and
having no doubt of the good character of both the parties,
sent them to the workhouse as a protection from the rage
of the mob.
   On the day appointed for the practice of the infernal
ceremony an immense number of people, supposed to be
not fewer than five thousand, assembled near the workhouse
at Tring, vowing revenge against Osborne and his wife,
as a wizard and witch, and demanding that they should
be delivered up to their fury:  they likewise pulled down a
wall belonging to the workhouse, and broke the windows
and their frames.
   On the preceding evening the master of the workhouse,
suspecting some violence, from what he had heard of the
disposition of the people, sent Osborne and his wife to the
vestry-room belonging to the church, as a place the most
likely to secure them from insult.
   The mob would not give credit to the master of the work-
house that the parties were removed, but rushing into the
house searched it through, examining the closets, boxes,
trunks, and even the salt-box, in search of them. There

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being a hole in the ceiling which appeared to have been left
by the plasterers, Colley, who was one of the most active
of the gang, cried out : " Let us search the ceiling." This
being done by Charles Young, with as little success as
before, they swore they would pull down the house and
set fire to the whole town of Tring unless Osborne and his
wife were produced.
   The master of the workhouse, apprehensive that they
would carry their threats into execution, informed them
where the poor people were concealed; on which the whole
mob, with Colley at their head, went to the church and
brought them off in triumph.
   This being done, the mob conducted them to a pond
called Marlston Mere, where the man and woman were
separately tied up in a cloth ; then a rope was bound round
the body of the woman, under her armpits, and two men
dragged her into the pond and through it several times,
Colley going into the pond and, with a stick, turning her
from side to side.
   Having ducked her repeatedly in this manner, they placed
her by the side of the pond and dragged the old man in and
ducked him; then he was put by, and the woman ducked
again as before, Colley making the same use of his stick.
With this cruelty the husband was treated twice over and the
wife three times, during the last of which the cloth in which
she was wrapped came off and she appeared quite naked.
   Not satisfied with this barbarity, Colley pushed his stick
against her breast. The poor woman attempted to lay hold
of it, but, her strength being now exhausted, she expired
on the spot. Then Colley went round the pond collecting
money of the populace for the sport he had shown them
in ducking the old witch, as he called her.
   Colley was taken into custody, and when his trial came
on, there being a variety of strong proofs of the prisoner's
guilt, he was convicted, and received sentence of death.
   The day before his execution he was removed from the
jail of Hertford, under the escort of one hundred men of
the Oxford Blues, commanded by seven officers, and being

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lodged in the jail of St Albans was put in a chaise at five
o'clock the next morning, with the hangman, and reached
the place of execution about eleven, where his wife and
daughter came to take leave of him; and the minister of
Tring assisted him in his last moments, when he died
exhibiting all the marks of unfeigned penitence.
   His body was hung in chains at a place called Gubblecut,
near where the offence was committed.

"                  "                "                 "              "             "
   Still more surprising it is to find that the dangerous
absurdity of the belief in witchcraft was manifested in
England in the beginning of the more enlightened nine-
teenth century. Two ignorant and deluded people, H.
Ibbelson and his wife, were committed to Wakefield House
of Correction for violently assaulting and wounding E. Berry,
their niece, who had been lately married.
   These ignorant people, having conceived the idea that
the young woman had bewitched them, formed a plan to
draw blood from her, in order to dispel the charm; and
meeting with her in the market-place they both suddenly
assailed her, the woman biting and scratching her, while
the husband stabbed her in the body.

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