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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

JOHN PERROTT

A Bankrupt, who refused to make Full Disclosures of
his Effects, and was executed in Smithfield,
11th of November, 1761

JOHN PERROTT was born at Newport Pagnell, in
Buckinghamshire, about sixty miles north of London,
in the year 1723, being about thirty-eight years of age at
his death. His father died when he was seven years old,
and his mother about two years afterwards, leaving him a
fortune of about fifteen hundred pounds. After the death
of his parents he was, by the direction of a guardian, placed
in the Foundation School of Gilsborough, in Northampton-
shire, where he continued five years. He was then, being
about fifteen years old, put apprentice to his half-brother at
Hampstead, in Hertfordshire, where he served out his time.
   In the year 1747 he came up to London, and began to
trade for himself in foreign white lace, but kept no shop.
In the beginning of the year 1749 he took a house, and
opened a warehouse in Blowbladder Street.  About the year
1752 he removed from Blowbladder Street to Ludgate Hill,
where he opened a linendraper's shop, and dealt in various
other articles, styling himself " merchant." From the time
of his opening this shop till the year 1759 he returned
annually about two thousand pounds, and was remarkably
punctual in his payments.
   Having thus established his reputation, and finding that
no credit which he should ask would be refused him, he
formed a scheme of abusing this confidence, which he began
to put into execution by contracting for goods, of different
sorts, to the value of thirty thousand pounds, the greater part
of which, amounting to the value of twenty-five thousand
pounds, he actually got into his possession. In pursuance
of his project it was necessary to convert these goods into
ready money as soon as possible; he therefore employed
one Henry Thompson (who had for three or four years
acted as his agent, or broker) to sell them for ready money.

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Thompson, at this time, kept a little house in Monkwell
Street, near Wood Street, whither the goods were.sent in
the dusk of the evening, and whither he invited some of the
principal traders to look at them, as goods consigned to
him from the places where they were manufactured. Perrott
always set a price upon them, which Thompson showed to
his chapmen, who usually fixed another price at which they
would buy; at this price Thompson was always ordered to
sell, though it was frequently fifteen or twenty per cent.
below prime cost.
   When he had thus converted the goods he obtained upon
credit into money, and before the time when he was to pay
for them arrived, he summoried his creditors together, who
accordingly met, on the 17th of January, 1760, at the Half
Moon tavern, in Cheapside, where he acquainted them
that he was unable to pay the whole of what he owed, re-
ferring himself entirely to their pleasure, and promising
to acquiesce in all such measures as they should propose, to
pursue their own benefit and security.
   This conduct and these professions had so plausible an
appearance that Perrott's creditors conceived a favourable
opinion of him, notwithstanding the loss they were likely
to suffer. It was however determined that a commission
of bankruptcy should be sued out against him, and Perrott
having agreed to cause himself to be denied the next day
to a person whom his creditors were to send to demand
money, as the common and most ready foundation of com-
missions of bankruptcy, such a commission was issued
against him on the 19th of January, the second day after
meeting, and Perrott, being found and declared a bankrupt,
surrendered himself as such.
   The 26th of the same month, the 4th of February and
the 4th of March were appointed for his appearance before
the Commissioners, to make a full disclosure of his estate
and effects.
   But two of Perrott's creditors found, upon an inspection
of his accounts and affairs, such a deficiency and confusion
as gave them just reason to suspect his integrity. He was

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accordingly summoned before the Commissioners on the
26th of February, and then, being hard pressed, he acknow-
ledged that he had bought goods, since the year 1758, to
the amount of twenty thousand pounds, and sold them him-
self, or by Thompson, for ready money, at fifteen or twenty
per cent. under prime cost ; and that, about five years before,
he hired a house in Hide Street, near Bloomsbury Square,
at thirty pounds per annum rent, and furnished it at the
expense of about a hundred and thirty pounds ; that it was
for a lady, and that he lived in it for about a year and a half
and then quitted it, and sold the furniture. And he swore
also that he had not since that time any other house or
lodging, or paid for the lodging of any other person.
   An examination which produced such proof of the
bankrupt's misconduct greatly increased the suspicions
of his creditors that more knavery was intended; and
it appeared that, though he had kept regular books from
1752 to 1757, yet at the end of that time they were in
some confusion, and afterwards in total disorder. Neither
were any traces to be discovered of accounts between him and
Thompson, notwithstanding the very large transactions be-
tween them : which was another reasonable cause to suspect
fraudulent designs.
   On the 19th of April, 1760, Perrott appeared before the
Commissioners, and exhibited, upon oath, an account of his
effects, which, after giving him credit for all the money he
had paid, and making him debtor for all the goods he had
sold, from his first entering into trade to his bankruptcy,
left a deficiency of no less than thirteen thousand, five hun-
dred and thirteen pounds. He was therefore required to
declare upon oath what had become of that sum, to which
he replied that had he lost two thousand pounds on goods
which he had sold in the last year; and one thousand pounds
and upwards by mournings ; and that for nine or ten years,
he was sorry to say, he had been extremely extravagant,
and spent large sums of money.
   As Perrott, during this examination, had also sworn that
he never gamed, and as the vast sum unaccounted for came

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into his hands only in the last year, it appeared scarcely
possible that it should, in that one year, be dissipated by any
species of extravagance ; if not dissipated, it was concealed
and Perrott therefore was the same night committed to
Newgate, for " not having given satisfactory answers on
his examination."
   In Newgate he was constantly visited by Mrs Ferne, a
friend, who was always elegantly dressed, and who came in
•a chariot or post-chaise, attended by a servant in livery or
a maid-servant, or both. They used frequently to dress a
chop themselves, and Perrott condescended to clean his
own knives; yet his folly and improvidence were so great
that at this very time he indulged himself and madam with
green peas at five shillings a quart.
   After he had continued in Newgate six weeks he gave
notice to the Commissioners that he would give a more
satisfactory account of the deficiency in his estate, and being
therefore brought before them on the 5th of June, 1760, he
gave in, upon oath, the following account:-
 
 
Fitting up my warehouse in Blowbladder Street,
and furnishing the same
L100
Rent and boy's wages during my stay there  100
Travelling expenses during the same  100
My own diet during that time  125
Clothes, hats, wigs and other wearing necessaries  200
Fitting up my house on Ludgate Hill  100
Furnishing the same  200
Housekeeping, during my stay there, with rent .
 taxes, and servants' wages
2,700
Clothes, hats, wigs, shoes and other wearing
 apparel during my stay there
Travelling expenses during my stay on Ludgate
 Hill
 360
Horses, and keeping them, saddles, bridles and
 farrier's bill, during my residence on Ludgate
Hill and Blowbladder Street
 575
                                                      Carry forward     L5,280

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                                                    Brought forward  L5,2 80
 
Tavern expenses, coffee-house expenses, and places
of diversion during the above time
 920
Expenses attending the connection I had with the
fair sex
5,500
Paid Mr Thompson for selling goods by commission  300
Forgave him a debt in consideration of his trouble
and time in getting bills accepted, etc. .
  30
Lost by goods and mourning 3,000
                                                              Total           L15,030
 

  To this account he added the most solemn asseveration
upon oath that he had not concealed any part of his estate
and effects whatsoever.
   With this account the Commissioners were equally dis-
satisfied, so they sent him back to Newgate; and some
time after he petitioned the Lord Keeper to be discharged.
But his Lordship, upon hearing the last deposition which
Perrott thought fit to annex to his petition read, thought it
so infamous that he would not order any attendance upon it.
   As the creditors had now no doubt of the concealment of
a great part of Perrott's estate, a reward of forty per cent.
was offered by advertisements, often repeated, for the dis-
covery of any part of such estate. It happened that Mr
Hewit, one of Perrott's assignees, walking one morning
upon the terrace in Lincoln's Inn Gardens, observed a
woman leaning over the wall, who had something so dis-
consolate and forlorn in her appearance that he could not
resist his curiosity to speak to her. Upon inquiring what
was the cause of her present apparent distress, she told
him that she had been turned out of her service by one
Mrs Ferne, and knew not where to go. The name of
Ferne immediately rendered his curiosity interested in a
high degree, and he sent her to Mr Cobb, who was clerk
under Perrott's commission, to get her examined.
   The examination of this woman, whose name was Mary
Harris, was taken before Justice Fielding, on the 23rd of

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June, 1761, and, in consequence of this information, Ferne's
apartments, which were very expensively furnished, were
searched, by virtue of Fielding's warrant, and, at the same
time, Perrott's room in Newgate, by virtue of a warrant
from the Commissioners.
   In Ferne's possession were found the halves of four
bank-notes, amounting in all to one hundred and eighty-five
pounds, and the corresponding halves were found at the
bottom of Perrott's trunk, hidden, sewed up very carefully
in a piece of rag, together with the signed moiety of another
bank-note for one thousand pounds.
   Upon this discovery, Ferne was carried before the justice,
and examined concerning the bank-notes, when she insisted
they were her own property, and received from gentlemen,
as a gratuity, for favours ; but these very notes were, by
the indefatigable diligence of those concerned, traced back
into money paid to Thompson for goods which he sold on
Perrott's account.
   After some subsequent examinations of Mrs Ferne, and
of one Martin Matthias, and one Pye Donkin, who acted
as attorneys for Perrott -- which examinations all tended
to prove that Perrott had deposited notes to a great value in
Ferne's hands, and to expose the shameless perjury of Ferne
-- all proceedings were suspended till the trial in September,
1761, when, it being proved that the notes found in the
possession of Ferne and Perrott were the produce of Perrott's
estate, he.was convicted, and received sentence of death.
   From the time of his having been charged with a capital
offence he was put into irons; yet he seemed healthy and
cheerful. He was often urged to make a full disclosure of his
effects, but obstinately refused, saying he was to die : that
was atonement sufficient for the wrongs he had committed.
   He was, in consequence of his own request, visited the
day before his death by his assignees, to whom, however,
he refused to answer particular questions relating to his
estate, giving as a reason that he had received the Sacrament.
This reason for answering no questions seems to prove
that he had secretly determined not to disclose his estate

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by answering truly; because, in this case, he avoided the
crime of falsehood by being silent, though otherwise his
answer would have coincided with every part of Christian
duty, and his having received the Sacrament would rather
have been a reason for his answering them than not.
   On the morning of his execution he confessed the justice
of his sentence. He expressed great solicitude about what
should become of his body, desiring it might be buried in
the church of the place where he was born. To this he
added another request, which was much more rational:
he desired that the time might be enlarged in the chapel
and shortened at the place of execution. He was in chapel
therefore from eight to three-quarters after nine ; the next
half-hour was employed in knocking off his irons; about
ten minutes more were spent in taking leave of his fellow-
convict, one Lee, who was condemned for forgery; and
about a quarter after ten he appeared, pale and trembling,
at the door of the press-yard, and was immediately put into
the cart. He was executed in Smithfield.

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