The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

JOSEPH JOHNSON

Pickpocket and "Esquire," who swindled
many Farmers and was executed at Tyburn,
19th of July, 1738, at the Age of Sixty

THE parents of Joseph Johnson lived in the Old Jewry,
and, being very poor people, his education was totally
neglected. He kept bad company almost from his infancy,
and becoming a pickpocket while yet a child, he continued
that practice till he was above twenty years of age.
   He then took to a new mode of fraud. He used to meet
porters and errand-boys in the streets and, by a variety
of false pretences, get possession of the goods entrusted to
their care. For one of these offences he was taken into
custody, and tried at the Old Bailey, where he was
acquitted in defect of evidence.
   Having thus obtained his liberty, he had recourse to
his former practices, till, being apprehended for stealing a
sword, he was tried and convicted at the Old Bailey, and
sentenced to seven years' transportation.
   It happened that one of his fellow-convicts was possessed
of a stolen bank-note, which was changed, as is presumed,
with the captain of the vessel, who had a gratuity for their

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liberty; for when they arrived in America they were set
at large, and took lodgings at New York, where they lived
some time in an expensive manner; and the captain, on his
return to England, stopped at Rotterdam, where he offered
the stolen note to a banker; on which he was lodged in
prison, and did not obtain his liberty without considerable
difficulty.
   Johnson and his associate, having quitted New York,
embarked for Holland, whence they came to England,
where they assumed the dress and appearance of people of
fashion, and frequented all the places of public diversion.
Thus disguised, Johnson used to mix with the crowd
and steal watches, etc., which his accomplice carried off
unsuspected.
   In the summer-time, when London was thin of com-
pany, Johnson and his companion used to ride through the
country, the former appearing as a gentleman of fortune
and the latter as his servant. On their arrival at an inn
they inquired of the landlord into the circumstances of the
farmers in the neighbourhood, and when they had learned
the name and residence of one who was rich, with such
other particulars as might forward their plan, the "servant "
was dispatched to tell the farmer that the "Esquire" would
be glad to speak with him at the inn; and he was commis-
sioned to hint that his master's property in the public funds
was very considerable.
   This bait generally succeeded : the farmer hastened to
the inn, where he found the "Esquire" in an elegant un-
dress; who, after the first compliments, informed him that
he was come down to purchase a valuable estate in the
neighbourhood, which he thought so well worth the buying
that he had agreed to pay part of the money that day; but
not having sufficient cash in his possession he had sent for
the farmer to lend him part of the sum, and assured him that
he should be no loser by granting the favour.
   To make sure of his prey, he had always some counterfeit
jewels in his possession, which he used to deposit in the
farmer's hands, to be taken up when the money was repaid;

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and, by artifices of this kind, Johnson and his associate
acquired large sums of money; the former not only chang-
ing his name, but disguising his person so that detection
was almost impossible.
   This practice he continued for a succession of years, and
in one of his expeditions of this kind got possession of a
thousand pounds, with which he escaped unsuspected.
   In order to avoid detection he took a small house in
Southwark, where he used to live in the most obscure
manner, not even permitting his servant-maid to open the
window lest he should be discovered.
   Thus he continued committing these kinds of frauds, and
living in retirement on the profits arising from them, till he
reached the age of sixty years ; when, though he was poor,
he was afraid to make fresh excursions to the country, but
thought of exercising his talents in London.
   Thereupon he picked the pockets of several persons of
as many watches as produced money enough to furnish him
with an elegant suit of clothes, in which he went to a public
ball, where he walked a minuet with the kept mistress of
a nobleman, who invited him to drink tea with her on the
following day.
   He accepted the invitation, when she informed him that
she had another engagement to a ball, and should think
herself extremely honoured by his company. He readily
agreed to the proposal ; but, while in company, he picked
the pocket of Mr Pye, a merchant's clerk, of a pocket-
book, containing bank-notes to the amount of five hundred
pounds.
  Pye had no idea of his loss till the following day, when
he should have accounted with his employer. When the
discovery was made, immediate notice was sent to the bank
to stop payment of the notes ; and Johnson was actually
changing one of them, to the amount of fifty pounds, when
the messenger came thither. Thereupon he was taken
into custody, and being tried at the next sessions at the
Old Bailey, for privately stealing, was capitally convicted;
and this offence being without the benefit of clergy, he was

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sentenced to death.  He was hanged at Tyburn, on the 19th
of July, 1738, without making any confession of his crimes,
and refusing to join in the customary devotions on such an
awful occasion, though a sinner of above sixty years of age

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