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The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON AND JOHN
STOCKDALE

Executed at Tyburn, 3rd of  July, 1753, and their Bodies
hanged in Chains, for Murder

CHRISTOPHER JOHNSON was born in Newgate,
both his parents being convicted of fraud. Having
imbibed false ideas of gentility, he procured some elegant
clothes and frequented the gaming-houses, where he soon
made the most dangerous connections and arrived at the
head of his profession.
   From the practice of gaming he took to that of forgery,
at which he was remarkably expert in imitating the hands
of other people to notes payable to himself; by which he
repeatedly acquired money, but still escaped detection.
   His daring was such that he sometimes arrested persons
on whom he had committed forgeries and compelled the
payment of the money, by having people ready to swear
that the handwriting was that of the party whose name was
subscribed to the draft.
   The following is one specimen of his devices. He forged
a note on a lady of considerable fortune, and signed her
name to it so like her writing that she almost discredited

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her own sight when she read it. Johnson arrested her.
But as she knew she had given no such note, she bailed
the action and prepared to stand trial ; but the guilty man
declined all further proceedings.
   After this Johnson took to picking pockets and other
low practices of defraud; but a miserable poverty still
attended him, for what he got dishonestly was soon spent
in dissipation. At length he met John Stockdale, at Sadler's
Wells, and agreed to see him the next evening at a house
in Holborn.
   Stockdale was born at Leicester, where his father was a
reputable proctor, who gave him an excellent education,
but was too fond of him to keep that strict guard over his
conduct which might have been essential to his future
welfare. He very soon showed a disposition to idleness,
which was not properly checked by his parents, who would
not permit his schoolmaster to chastise him for his faults.
When the father saw his error he determined, in pursuance
of the advice of some friends, to send him to a proctor in
Doctors' Commons, where he hoped to hear of a speedy
reformation in his manners. Stockdale, however, was of
too idle a disposition to brook confinement. His extrava-
gance exceeded the bounds of his father's allowance, and
he borrowed of his acquaintances to supply his immediate
wants. In this way he went on frequenting places of public
diversion, till those who had lent him money teased him for
a return of it; and he was at a loss for further resources
when he met Johnson at Sadler's Wells.
   On the following day these ill-fated youths met at the
appointed place and made a contract for their mutual
destruction. At this time Johnson was under twenty and
Stockdale not eighteen years of age. Stockdale agreed to
accompany Johnson, and the next day they hired horses
and rode towards Romford, near which the party lived
whom they intended to rob; and having wasted the time
till night, they tied their horses to a hedge and, being armed
with pistols, knocked at the door, which was opened
by the old gentleman. Johnson presented a pistol to his

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breast, and then they bound him and his two servants, and
told the master that he must expect immediate death if he
did not discover where his money was concealed.
   Terrified by this threat, he told them to take a key from
his pocket which would open a bureau, where they would
find a bag containing all the cash then in his possession.
The robbers having seized the property, Johnson put the
bag into his pocket and then remounted and rode to London,
where they found the booty to consist of one hundred and
fifty pounds; but this they soon dissipated in acts of extrava-
gance, and then proceeded to commit a number of robberies
on the roads of Essex and Kent.
   They took horses in Holborn, and, having ridden to
Edmonton, turned up a lane, where they met a postman,
who was carrying letters round the neighbourhood. The
man good-naturedly opened the gate for them to pass, when
Johnson demanded his money and watch, which he held out
to them, and at that instant was shot dead by Stockdale.
   The murder was no sooner committed than they hastened
to London; and, though the country was alarmed by what
had happened, they rode on the following day to Hounslow,
where they dined. After dinner they called for their horses,
but Stockdale was so intoxicated that he at first fell from the
horse, but was replaced.
   The magistrates having by this time sent out a number
of constables, the murderers were taken into custody and
carried before a magistrate, when Stockdale acknowledged
his guilt; but by this time Johnson was so drunk that he was
insensible of his confinement to Newgate.
   When brought up to receive sentence of death, Johnson
was so unwell that he was indulged with a chair. Stockdale
kept up his spirits with decent fortitude until his eyes met
those of a gentleman near him with whom he had lived,
when he burst into tears, and continued in great agitation
the remainder of the awful time, frequently beating his
head and breast in a violent manner.
   Johnson was so extremely debilitated that he could pay no
attention at the place of execution to the preparation of his

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soul for another life; but Stockdale prayed fervently, and
made a pathetic address to the populace at the fatal tree.
After hanging the usual time their bodies were taken to
Surgeons' Hall for dissection ; and preparations for that
purpose were being made when an order came from the office
of the Secretary of State that they should be hung in chains
on Winchmore Hill, where they were accordingly placed.

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