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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

WILLIAM PAGE

A Gentleman of the Road who drove in a Phaeton and Pair,
and after many Adventures was executed for Highway
Robbery on 6th of April, 1758

WILLIAM PAGE was the son of a respectable farmer
at Hampton, and being a lad of promising parts he
was sent to London to be educated, under the care of his
cousin, a haberdasher. His early life, by the superstitious
believers of old sayings, would be adduced as proof positive
of the truth of the old adage that " a man who is born to
be hanged will never be drowned "; and, although we can-
not put much faith generally in such notions, we cannot
help in this instance pointing out some peculiarities in the
adventures of our hero which might have been considered
by him as a sufficient indication of his fate. The early
chronicler of his life says that, during the hard frost in the
winter of 1739, Page was sliding with other boys on the
canal in St James's Park, when the ice broke under him and
he sank; and, the ice immediately closing over him, he would
have perished, but just at this juncture the ice again broke

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with another boy near him, and Page arose precisely at the
vacancy made by the latter, and was saved, although his
companion was drowned. The second instance of the in-
tervention of his good fortune occurred in the summer
following this singular escape. Page was then trying to;
swim with corks in the Thames, when they slipped from
under his arms and he sank; but a waterman got him up,
and he soon recovered. On the third occasion he was going
up the river on a party of pleasure, about five years after-wards,
with several other young fellows, when the boat overset with
them in Chelsea Reach, and every one in the boat was drowned
except Page. But his fourth and last escape from a watery
grave was even more miraculous than any of those
which preceded it. About eighteen months after that which
is last related he was on a voyage to Scotland. The ship in
which he sailed foundered in Yarmouth Roads, and most of
the people on board perished; but another vessel, observing
their distress, sent out a long-boat, by the help of which Page
and a few others saved their lives.
   To return, however, to the ordinary events of his life.
It appeared that, his cousin having given him employment
in his shop, his vanity prevented him from bestowing that
attention on his business to which it was entitled; and his
extravagance being checked by his relation, who stopped
his pocket-money in order to curb his refined notions, he
had recourse to plunder to supply his necessities. Money
being repeatedly missed from the till, and all attempts to dis-
cover the thief among the servants having failed, suspicion
at length rested on our hero; and, his guilt having been
distinctly proved, he was dismissed from his situation forth-
with. An effort which he made to conciliate his relation after
this proved. ineffectual ; and his father, who had learned the
nature of his irregularities, having refused to render him
any assistance, he at length journeyed to York, and there
joined a company of strolling players. His exertions in his
new capacity were not unsuccessful ; but at length, attempt-
ing to play Cato while in a state of intoxication, his character
in the play and his condition of person were found to agree

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William Page robs a gentleman near Putney


so badly that he was compelled to be carried from the stage,
and was dismissed from his engagement. He afterwards
went to Scarborough, where his necessities compelled him
to accept a situation as livery-servant with a gentleman ;
but, his master having been robbed on his way to town,
he formed a notion that highway robbery was an easy and
profitable mode of living, and determined that so soon as
he should have the means of starting in the profession he
would become a " gentleman of the road." Quitting his
master at the end of twelve months he became acquainted
with a woman of abandoned character, in conjunction with
whom he took lodgings near Charing Cross, and he then
commenced as highwayman. His first expedition was on
th Kentish Road, and meeting the Canterbury stage, near
Shooter's Hill, he robbed the passengers of watches and
money to the amount of about thirty pounds; and then,
riding through a great part of Kent to take an observation
of the cross-roads, he returned to London. He now took
lodgings near Grosvenor Square, and, frequenting billiard-
tables, won a little money, which, added to his former stock,
prevented his having recourse to the highway again for a
considerable time, But at length he met with a gambler
who was more expert than himself and stripped him of
all his money. He then again sought the road as a means
of subsistence. His exertions were for some time fruitless,
but at length meeting with a handsome booty he was
emboldened by his success, and, taking luxurious lodgings,
soon gained the friendship of some young men of fashion.
His next object was to improve his mind and person; and,
having gained some knowledge, by dint of impudence and
through a pleasing exterior he got introduced into decent
society.
   By this time he had drawn, from his own observation and
for his private use, a most curious map of the roads twenty
miles round London, and, driving in a phaeton and pair, was
not suspected for a highwayman.
   In his excursions for robbery he used to dress in a laced
or embroidered frock, and wear his hair tied behind ; but

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when at a distance from London he would turn into some
unfrequented place and, having disguised himself in other
clothes, with a grizzled or black wig, and saddled one of his
horses, he would ride to the main road and commit a robbery.
This done, he would hasten back to the carriage, resume his
former dress, and drive to town again.
   He had once an escape of a very remarkable kind.
Having robbed a gentleman near Putney, some persons came
up at the juncture and pursued him so closely that he was
obliged to cross the Thames for his security. In the interim
some haymakers, crossing the field where Page's carriage
was left, found and carried off his gay apparel ; and the
persons who had pursued him, meeting them, charged them
with being accomplices in the robbery. A report of this
affair being soon spread, Page heard of it, and, throwing his
clothes into a well, he went back almost naked, claimed the
carriage as his own, and declared that the men had stripped
him and thrown him into a ditch. All the parties now went
before a justice of the Peace; and the maker of the carriage
appearing, and declaring that it was the property of Mr Page,
the poor haymakers were committed for trial ; but obtained
their liberty after the next assizes, as Page did not appear to
prosecute.
   After this he made no further use of the phaeton as a
disguise for his robberies; but it served him occasionally
on parties of pleasure, which he sometimes took with a girl
whom he had then in keeping.
   The road and the gaming-table were his only means of
support, and he found a fitting companion in his proceed-
ings in the person of an old schoolfellow named Darwell,
in conjunction with whom, in the course of three years, he
committed upwards of three hundred robberies. At length,
however, their iniquitous proceedings caused an active search
to be made for them; and Darwell, being apprehended,
" peached " upon his companion, and disclosed the places
where it was most likely that he would be found.
   The consequence was that Page was apprehended at the
Golden Lion, near Hyde Park, when three loaded pistols

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were found on him, with powder, balls, a wig to disguise
himself, and the correct map of the roads round London
which we have already mentioned.
   He was sent to Newgate, and an advertisement was
inserted in the papers requesting such persons as had been
robbed to attend his re-examination ; but he denied all that
was alleged against him, and as he was always disguised
when he committed any robbery no person present could
identify his person.
   He was tried at length on suspicion of robbing Mr Webb
in Belfourd Lane, but acquitted for want of evidence; and
after this he was tried at Hertford, but again acquitted for
a like reason.
   From Hertford he was removed to Maidstone jail, and
being tried at Rochester, for robbing Captain Farrington on
Blackheath, he was capitally convicted, and received sentence
of death. He suffered at Maidstone on the 6th of April, 1758.

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