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The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

GEORGE PRICE

Sentenced to Death for murdering his Wife, but died of
Jail Fever, 22nd of October, 1738

THIS malefactor was a native of Hay, in Brecknock-
shire, where he lived as a servant to a widow lady.
Having lived in this station seven years, he repaired to
London, and became acquainted with Mary Chambers,
servant at a public-house at Hampstead, whom he married
at the expiration of a fortnight from his first paying his
addresses to her; but Mr Brown, his master, disapproving
of the match, dismissed Price from his service.
   Soon after this he took his wife into Brecknockshire, and
imposed her on his relations as the daughter of a military
officer, who would become entitled to a large fortune. He
was treated in the most friendly manner by his relations ;
and the young couple returning to London, the wife went
to lodge at Hampstead, while Price engaged in the service
of a gentleman in New Broad Street.
   Mrs Price, being delivered of twins, desired her hus-
band to buy some medicine to make the children sleep, which
he procured; and on the children dying soon afterwards a
report was circulated that he had poisoned them ; but this
circumstance he denied to the last moment of his life.
  Price now paid his addresses to other women, and con-
ceiving his wife as an obstacle between him and his wishes
he formed the infernal resolution of murdering her. He
told her that he had procured the place of a nursery-maid
for her in the neighbourhood of Putney, and that he would
attend her thither that very day. He then directed her to
meet him at the Woolpack, in Monkwell Street. Accord-
ingly she went home and dressed herself (having borrowed
some clothes of her landlady) and met her husband, who
put her in a chaise, and drove her out of town towards
Hounslow. When he came on Hounslow Heath it was
nearly ten o'clock at night; when he suddenly stopped
the chaise and threw the lash of the whip round his wife's

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neck; but drawing it too hastily he made a violent mark on
her chin ; immediately finding his mistake, he placed it lower,
on which she exclaimed: " My dear! my dear! For God's
sake -- if this is your love, I will never trust you more."
   Immediately on her pronouncing these words, which
were her last, he pulled the ends of the whip with great
force; but, the violence of his passion abating, he let go
before she was quite dead ; yet, resolving to accomplish the
horrid deed, he once more put the thong of the whip about
her neck, and pulled it with such violence that it broke;
but not till the poor woman was dead.
   Having stripped the body, he left it almost under a
gibbet where some malefactors hung in chains, having first
disfigured it to such a degree that he presumed it could
not be known. He brought the clothes to London, some
of which he cut in pieces, and dropped in different streets ;
but knowing that the others were borrowed of the landlady
he sent them to her, a circumstance that materially conduced
to his conviction.
   He reached London about one o'clock in the morning,
and being interrogated why he came at such an unseason-
able hour, he said that the Margate hoy had been detained
in the river by contrary winds.
   On the following day the servants and other people
made so many inquiries respecting his wife that, terrified at
the idea of being taken into custody, he immediately fled to
Portsmouth, with a view to entering on board a ship ; but
no vessel was then ready to sail.
   While he was drinking at an ale-house in Portsmouth he
heard the bellman crying him as a murderer, with such an
exact description of him that he was apprehensive of being
seized, and observing a window which opened to the water
he jumped out, and swam for his life.
   Having gained the shore, he travelled all night, till he
reached a farmhouse, where he slept on some straw in the
barn.
   On the following day he crossed the country towards
Oxford, where he endeavoured to get into service, and would

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have been engaged by a physician, but happening to read
a newspaper in which he was advertised he immediately
decamped from Oxford, and travelled into Wales.
   Having stopped at a village a few miles from Hay, at
the house of a shoemaker, to whom his brother was
apprenticed, the latter obtained his master's permission
to accompany his brother home; and while they were on
their walk the malefactor recounted the particulars of the
murder which had obliged him to seek his safety in flight.
   The brother commiserated his condition; and, leaving
him at a small distance from their father's house, went in
and found the old gentleman reading an advertisement
describing the murderer. The younger son bursting into
tears, the father said he hoped his brother was not come;
to which the youth replied: " Yes, he is at the door; but
being afraid that some of the neighbours were in the house
he would not come in till he had your permission."
   The offender on being introduced fell on his knees, and
earnestly besought his father's blessing ; to which the aged
parent said: " Ah!  George, I wish God may bless you,
and what I have heard concerning you may be false." The
son said: " It is false; but let me have a private room;
make no words ; I have done no harm; let me have a room
to myself."
   Being accommodated agreeable to his request, he pro-
duced half-a-crown, begging that his brother would buy a
lancet, as he was resolved to put a period to his miserable
existence; but the brother declined to in any way aid in
the commission of the crime of suicide; and the father,
after exerting every argument to prevent his thinking of
such a violation of the laws of God, concealed him for two
days.
   It happened that the neighbours observed a fire in a room
where none had been for a considerable time before, and a
report was propagated that Price was secreted in the house
of his father ; whereupon he thought it prudent to abscond
in the night; and having reached Gloucester he went to an
inn and procured the place of an ostler.

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   During his residence at Gloucester two of the sons of the
lady with whom he had first lived as a servant happened
to be at a school in that city, and Price behaved to them
with so much civility that they wrote to their mother
describing his conduct; in reply to which she informed
them that he had killed his wife, and desired them not to
hold any correspondence with him.
   The young gentlemen mentioning this circumstance, one
of Price's fellow-servants said to him: " You are the man
that murdered your wife on Hounslow Heath. I will not
betray you, but if you stay longer you will certainly be
taken into custody."
   Stung by the reflections of his own conscience, and
agitated by the fear of momentary detection, Price knew
not how to act; but at length he resolved to come to London
and surrender to justice; and calling on his former master,
and being apprehended, he was committed to Newgate.
   At the following sessions at the Old Bailey he was
brought to his trial, and convicted. He was sentenced to
death, but died of the jail fever1  in Newgate, before the law
could be executed on him, on the 22nd of October, 1738.
1 See Appendix

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