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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

JOHN M'CANNELLY AND LUKE MORGAN

A Daring Burglary committed in the House of Mr Porter,
of the Raike Farmhouse, near Chester, by M'Cannelly, Morgan,
Stanley, Boyd and Neill, Irish Haymakers, for

which the first two were executed on the
25th of May, 1752

MR PORTER, a wealthy farmer of Cheshire, had
engaged a number of Irish labourers in the year
1752 in his harvest-fields. One evening his house was beset
by a gang of them, who forcibly broke open his doors, ad-
vanced to him while at his supper-table, seized and bound
him with cords, at the same time, with horrid threats,
demanding his money.
   They also seized his eldest daughter, pinioned her, and
obliged her to show them where her father's money and
plate were deposited. In the confusion the youngest
daughter, a heroic little girl of thirteen-years of age, made
her escape, ran into the stable and got astride the bare
back of a horse only haltered ; but not daring to ride past
the house beset by the rogues she galloped over the fields,
leaping hedges and ditches, to Pulford, to inform her eldest
brother of the danger that was at the village. He and a
friend, named Craven, determined on attacking the villains,
and for that purpose set off at full speed, the little girl
accompanying them.
   On entering his paternal roof the son found one of the
villains on guard, whom he killed so instantaneously that
it caused no alarm. Proceeding to the parlour, they found
the other four in the very act of setting his father on the
fire, after robbing him of fourteen guineas, in order to
extort more. They had stripped down his breeches to his
feet, and his eldest daughter was on her knees, supplicating
for his life.
   What a sight was this for a son ! Like an enraged lion,
and backed by his brave friend, he flew upon them. They
fired two pistols and wounded both the father and the son,

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and a servant-boy whom they had also bound, but not
so as to disable them, for the son wrested a hanger from
one of them, cleft the villain to the ground, and cut the
others.
   The eldest daughter having unbound her father the old
man united his utmost efforts by the side of his son and
friend, and so hard did they press that the thieves jumped
through a window and ran off.
   The young men pursued and seized two more on Chester
Bridge, who dropped a silver tankard. The fifth got on
board a vessel at Liverpool, of which his brother was the
cook, bound for the West Indies; which sailed, but was
driven back by adverse winds.
   The account of the robbery, with the escape of the
remaining villain, having reached Liverpool, a King's boat
searched every vessel, and at length found the robber, by
the wounds he had received, and sent him in fetters to
Chester jail.
   Mr Porter had a servant-man in the house at the time, a
countryman of the robbers, who remained an unconcerned
spectator, and, afterwards running away, he was also sent
to prison, charged with being an accomplice. They were
brought to trial at Chester Assizes, in March, 1752, and
condemned.
   Boyd, on account of his youth, and his having endeavoured
to prevail upon the others not to murder Mr Porter, had
his sentence of death remitted for transportation. The hired
servant of Mr Porter was not prosecuted.
   On the Thursday previous to the day fixed for execution
Stanley slipped off his irons and, changing his dress,
escaped out of jail, and got clear off. On the 25th of May,
1752, M'Cannelly and Morgan were brought out of prison
in order to be hanged. Their behaviour was as decent as
could be expected from such low-bred men. They both
declared that Stanley, who escaped, was the sole contriver
of the robbery.
   They died in the Catholic faith, and were attended by a
priest.

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