The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

JACK SHEPPARD

A Daring Housebreaker, who made Ingenious Escapes from
Prison and even tried to foil his Executioner at
Tyburn on 16th of November, 1724

ALTHOUGH only in the twenty-third year of his age
when he was executed at Tyburn, on the 16th of
November, 1724, Jack Sheppard had become so notorious as
a housebreaker and prison-breaker that his exploits were the
talk of all ranks of society. A great warrior could not have
received greater attention than this famous criminal. Books
and pamphlets were written about him; a pantomime at
Drury Lane, called Harlequin Sheppard, was based on the
story of his adventures, and so was a three-act farce, called
The Prison-Breaker. Dozens of songs and glees referred to
his prowess, and clergymen preached sermons about him.
Sir James Thornhill, the celebrated painter who decorated
the dome of St Paul's Cathedral, painted his portrait, from
which engravings in mezzotinto were made. On this sub-
ject a poet, whose name is not given, wrote the following
lines:-
"Thornhill, tis thine to gild with fame
The obscure, and raise the humble name;
To make the form elude the grave,
And Sheppard from oblivion save.
Though life in vain the wretch implores,
An exile on the farthest shores,
Thy pencil brings a kind reprieve,
And bids the dying robber live.
[1]

This piece to latest time shall stand,
And show the wonders of thy hand:
Thus former masters graced their name,
And gave egregious robbers fame.

Apelles Alexander drew,
Cxsar is to Aurelius due;
Cromwell in Lely's works doth shine,
And Sheppard, Thornhill, lives in thine."
   John Sheppard was born in Spitalfields in the year 1702.
His father, who was a carpenter, bore the character of an
honest man; yet he had another son, named Thomas, who,
as well as Jack, turned out a thief. The father dying while
the boys were very young, they were left to the care of the
mother, who placed Jack at a school in Bishopsgate Street,
where he remained two years, and was then put apprentice
to a carpenter. He behaved with decency in this place for
about four years, when, frequenting the Black Lion ale-
house, in Drury Lane, he became acquainted with some
abandoned women, among whom the principal was Elizabeth
Lyon; otherwise called " Edgworth Bess," from the town of
Edgworth, where she was born.
   While he continued to work as a carpenter, he often
committed robberies in the houses where he was employed,
stealing tankards, spoons and other articles, which he carried
to Edgworth Bess; but not being suspected of having
committed these robberies, he at length resolved to com-
mence housebreaking. Exclusive of Edgworth Bess, he was
acquainted with a woman named Maggot, who persuaded
him to rob the house of Mr Bains, a piece-broker in White
Horse Yard; and Jack, having brought away a piece of
fustian from thence (which he deposited in his trunk), went
afterwards at midnight, and taking the bars out of the cellar
window entered, and stole goods and money to the amount
of twenty-two pounds, which he carried to Maggot.
   As Sheppard did not go home that night, nor the
following day, his master suspected that he had made bad

[2]

connections, and searching his trunk found the piece of
fustian that had been stolen; but Sheppard, hearing of this,
broke open his master's house in the night and carried off the
fustian, lest it should be brought in evidence against him.
Sheppard's master sending intelligence to Mr Bains of
what had happened, the latter looked over his goods and,
missing such a piece of fustian as had been described to
him, suspected that Sheppard must have been the robber,
and determined to have him taken into custody; but Jack,
hearing of the affair, went to him and threatened a prose-
cution for scandal, alleging that he had received the piece
of fustian from his mother, who bought it for him in Spital-
fields. The mother, with a view to screen her son, declared
that what he had asserted was true, though she could not
point out the place where she had made the purchase.
Though this story was not credited, Mr Bains did not take
any further steps in the affair.
   Sheppard's master seemed willing to think well of him,
and he remained some time longer in the family; but
after associating himself with the worst of company, and
frequently staying out the whole night, his master and he
quarrelled, and the headstrong youth totally absconded in
the last year of his apprenticeship and became connected
with a set of villains of Jonathan Wild's gang.
   Jack now worked as a journeyman carpenter, with a view
to the easier commission of robbery; and being employed
to assist in repairing the house of a gentleman in Mayfair
he took an opportunity of carrying off a sum of money, a
quantity of plate, some gold rings and four suits of clothes.
  Not long after this Edgworth Bess was apprehended
and lodged in the roundhouse of the parish of St Giles's,
where Sheppard went to visit her, and the beadle refusing
to admit him he knocked him down, broke open the door,
and carried her off in triumph-an exploit which acquired
him a high degree of credit with the women of abandoned
character.
   In the month of August, 1723, Thomas Sheppard, the
brother of Jack, was indicted at the Old Bailey for two

[3]

petty offences, and being convicted was burned in the hand.
Soon after his discharge he prevailed on Jack to lend him
forty shillings and take him as a partner in his robberies.
The first act they committed in concert was the robbing
of a public-house in Southwark, whence they carried off
some money and wearing apparel; but Jack permitted his
brother to reap the whole advantage of this booty.
   Not long after this the brothers, in conjunction with
Edgworth Bess, broke open the shop of Mrs Cook, a linen-
draper in Clare Market, and carried off goods to the value
of fifty-five pounds; and in less than a fortnight afterwards
stole some articles from the house of Mr Phillips, in Drury
Lane.
   Tom Sheppard, going to sell some of the goods stolen
at Mrs Cook's, was apprehended and committed to New-
gate, when, in the hope of being admitted an evidence, he
impeached his brother and Edgworth Bess; but they were
sought for in vain.
   At length James Sykes - otherwise called "Hell and
Fury " - one of Sheppard's companions, meeting with him
in St Giles's, enticed him into a public-house, in the hope
of receiving a reward for apprehending him; and, while
they were drinking, Sykes sent for a constable, who took
Jack into custody, and carried him before a magistrate, who,
after a short examination, sent him to St Giles's Round-
house; but he broke through the roof of that place and
made his escape in the night.
   Within a short time after this, as Sheppard and an
associate named Benson were crossing Leicester Fields,
the latter endeavoured to pick a gentleman's pocket of his
watch, but, failing in the attempt, the gentleman called out:
"A pickpocket! " - on which Sheppard was taken and lodged
in St Ann's Roundhouse, where he was visited by Edgworth
Bess, who was detained on suspicion of being one of his
accomplices.
   On the following day they were carried before a magis-
trate, and, some persons appearing who charged them
with felonies, they were committed to New Prison; and

[4]

as they passed for husband and wife they were permitted
to lodge together in a room known by the name of Newgate
Ward.
   Sheppard being visited by several of his acquaintances,
some of them furnished him with implements to make his
escape, and early in the morning, a few days after his com-
mitment, he filed off his fetters and, having made a hole in
the wall, he took an iron bar and a wooden one out of the
window; but as the height from which he was to descend
was twenty-five feet he tied a blanket and sheet together,
and, making one of them fast to a bar in the window,
Edgworth Bess first descended, and Jack followed her.
Having reached the yard, they had still a wall of twenty-
two feet high to scale; but climbing up by the locks and
bolts of the great gate, they got quite out of the prison,
and effected a perfect escape.
   Sheppard's fame was greatly celebrated among the lower
order of people by this exploit; and the thieves of St Giles's
courted his company. Among the rest, one Charles Grace,
a cooper, begged that he would take him as an associate in
his robberies, alleging as a reason for this request that the
girl he kept was so extravagant that he could not support
her on the profits of his own thefts. Sheppard did not
hesitate to make this new connection ; but at the same time
said that he did not admit of the partnership with a view
to any advantage to himself, but that Grace might reap the
profits of their depredations.
   Sheppard and Grace making acquaintance with Anthony
Lamb, an apprentice to a mathematical instrument-maker,
near St Clement's Church, it was agreed to rob a gentleman
who lodged with Lamb's master, and at two o'clock in the
morning Lamb let in the other villains, who stole money
and effects to a large amount. They put the door open, and
Lamb went to bed to prevent suspicion ; but notwithstand-
ing this his master did suspect him, and had him taken
into custody, when he confessed the whole affair before a
magistrate, and being committed to Newgate he was tried,
convicted, and received sentence to be transported.

[5]

   On the same day Thomas Sheppard (the brother of Jack)
was indicted for breaking open the dwelling-house of Mary
Cook and stealing her goods; and, being convicted, was
sentenced to transportation.
   Jack Sheppard not being in custody, he and " Blueskin,"
another notorious thief, who was executed a few days before
Sheppard met his fate, committed a number of daring
robberies, and sometimes disposed of the stolen goods to
William Field. Jack used to say that Field wanted courage
to commit a robbery, though he was as great a villain as
ever existed.
   Sheppard and "Blueskin" hired a stable near the Horse
Ferry, Westminster, in which they deposited their stolen
goods till they could dispose of them to the best advan-
tage, and in this place they put the woollen cloth which was
stolen from Mr Kneebone; for Sheppard was concerned
in this robbery, and at the sessions held at the Old Bailey,
in August, 1724, he was indicted for several offences, and
among the rest for breaking and entering the house of
William Kneebone and stealing one hundred and eight
yards of woollen cloth and other articles; and, being
capitally convicted, received sentence of death.
   We must now go back to observe that Sheppard and
"Blueskin" had applied to Field to look at these goods and
procure a customer for them, and he promised to do so;
nor was he worse than his word, for in the night he broke
open their warehouses and stole the ill-gotten property,
and then gave information against them to Jonathan Wild,
in consequence of which they were apprehended.
   On Monday, the 30th of August, 1724, a warrant was
sent to Newgatc for the execution of Sheppard, with other
convicts under sentence of death.
   It is proper to observe that in the old jail of Newgate
there was within the lodge a hatch, with large iron spikes,
which hatch opened into a dark passage, whence there were
a few steps into the condemned hold. The prisoners being
permitted to come down to the hatch to speak with their
friends, Sheppard, having been supplied with instruments,

[6]

took an opportunity of cutting one of the spikes in such a
manner that it might be easily broken off.
   On the evening of the above-mentioned 30th of August,
two women of Sheppard's acquaintance going to visit him,
he broke off the spike and, thrusting his head and shoulders
through the space, the women pulled him down, and he
effected his escape, notwithstanding some of the keepers
were at that time drinking at the other end of the lodge.
   On the day after his escape he went to a public-house
in Spitalfields, whence he sent for an old acquaintance, one
Page, a butcher in Clare Market, and advised with him how
to render his escape effectual for his future preservation.
After deliberating on the matter they agreed to go to
Warnden, in Northamptonshire, where Page had some
relations; and they had no sooner resolved than they made
the journey:  but Page's relations treating him with indif-
ference, they returned to London, after being absent only
about a week.
   On the night after their return, as they were walking up
Fleet Street together, they saw a watchmaker's shop open,
and only a boy attending. Having passed the shop, they
turned back, and Sheppard, driving his hand through the
window, stole three watches, with which they made their
escape.
   Some of Sheppard's old acquaintances informing him that
strict search was being made for him, he and Page retired to
Finchley, in the hope of lying there concealed till the diligence
of the jail-keepers should relax; but the keepers of Newgate,
having intelligence of their retreat, took Sheppard into
custody and conveyed him to his old lodgings.
   Such steps were now taken as were thought would be
effectual to prevent his future escape. He was put into a
strong-room called the "Castle" handcuffed, loaded with a
heavy pair of irons, and chained to a staple fixed in the floor.
The curiosity of the public being greatly excited by his
former escape, he was visited by great numbers of people
of all ranks, and scarce anyone left him without making
him a present in money, though he would have more gladly

[7]

received a file, a hammer, or a chisel ; but the utmost care
was taken that none of his visitors should furnish him
with such implements.
   Notwithstanding this disadvantageous situation, Sheppard
was continually employing his thoughts on the means of
another escape. On the 14th of October the sessions began
at the Old Bailey, and, the keepers being much engaged in
attending the court, he thought they would have little time
to visit him, and therefore the present juncture would be
the most favourable to carry his plan into execution.
   About two o'clock on the afternoon of the following day
one of the keepers carried him his dinner, and having care-
fully examined his irons, and found them fast, he left him
for the day. Some days before this Jack had found a small
nail in the room, with which he could, at pleasure, unlock
the padlock that went from the chain to the staple in the
floor; and in his own account of this transaction he says
that he was frequently about the room, and had several
times slept on the barracks when the keepers imagined he
had not been out of his chair.
   The keeper had not left him more than an hour when
he began -his operations. He first took off his handcuffs
and then opened the padlock that fastened the chain to
the staple. He next, by mere strength, twisted asunder a
small link of the chain between his legs, and then drawing
up his fetters as high as he could he made them fast with
his garters.
   He then attempted to get up the chimney, but had not
advanced far before lie was stopped by an iron bar that
went across it; on which he descended, and with a piece of
his broken chain picked out the mortar, and moving a small
stone or two, about six feet from the floor, he got out the
iron bar, which was three feet long and an inch square, and
proved very serviceable to him in his future proceedings.
   He in a short time made such a breach as to enable him to
get into the red room over the "Castle"; and here he found
a large nail, which he made use of in his further operations.
It was seven years since the door of this red room had been

[8]

opened, but Sheppard wrenched off the lock in less than
seven minutes, and got into the passage leading to the
chapel. In this place he found a door which was bolted on
the opposite side, but making a hole through the wall he
pushed the bolt back, and opened the door.
   Arriving at the door of the chapel, he broke off one of
the iron spikes, and keeping this for his further use got
into an entry between the chapel and the lower leads. The
door of this entry was remarkably strong, and fastened with
a large lock, and, night coming on, Sheppard was obliged
to work in the dark, Notwithstanding this disadvantage he
in half-an-hour forced open the box of the lock and opened
the door; but this led him to another room still more
difficult, for it was barred and bolted as well as locked;
however he wrenched the fillet from the main post of the
door, and the box and staples came off with it.
    It was now eight o'clock, and Sheppard found no further
obstruction to his proceedings, for he had only one other
door to open, which, being bolted on the inside, was opened
without difficulty, and he got over a wall to the upper leads.
   His next consideration was how he should descend with
the greatest safety. Accordingly he found that the most
convenient place for him to alight on would be the turner's
house adjoining to Newgate, but as it would have been
very dangerous to have jumped to such a depth he went
back for the blanket with which he used to cover himself
when he slept in the "Castle," and endeavourcd to fasten
his stocking to the blanket to case his descent; but not being
able to do so, he was compelled to use the blanket alone;
wherefore he made it fast to the wall of Newgate with the
spike that he took out of the chapel and, sliding down,
dropped on the turner's leads just as the clock was strik-
ing nine. It happened that the door of the garret next the
turner's leads was open, on which he stole softly down two
pair of stairs, and heard some company talking in a room.
His irons clinking, a woman cried, " What noise is that?
and a man answered, " Perhaps the dog or cat."
   Sheppard, who was exceedingly fatigued, returned to the

[9]

garret and lay down for more than two hours; after which
he crept down once more as far as the room where the
company were, when he heard a gentleman taking leave of
the family, and saw the maid light him downstairs. As soon
as the maid returned he resolved to venture all hazards,
but in stealing down the stairs he stumbled against a
chamber door; but instantly recovering himself, he got
into the street.
   By this time it was after twelve o'clock, and passing
by the watch-house of St Sepulchre he bid the watchman
good-morrow; then going up Holborn he turned down
Gray's Inn Lane, and about two in the morning got into
the fields near Tottenham Court, where he took shelter
in a place that had been a cowhouse, and slept soundly
about three hours. His fetters being still on, his legs were
greatly bruised and swelled, and he dreaded the approach
of daylight, lest he should be discovered. He had now
above forty shillings in his possession, but was afraid to
send to any person for assistance.
   At seven in the morning it began to rain hard, and
continued to do so all day, so that no person appeared in
the fields; and during this melancholy day he would, to
use his own expression, have given his right hand for
"a hammer, a chisel and a punch."  Night coming on, and
being pressed by hunger, he ventured to a chandler's little
shop in Tottenham Court Road, where he got a supply of
bread and cheese, small-beer and some other necessaries,
hiding his irons with a long greatcoat. He asked the woman
of the house for a hammer, but she had no such utensil ;
on which he retired to the cowhouse, where he slept that
night, and remained all the next day.
   At night he went again to the chandler's shop, supplied
himself with provisions, and returned to his hiding-place.
At six the next morning, which was Sunday, he began to
beat the basils of his fetters with a stone, in order to bring
them to an oval form, to slip his heels through. In the
afternoon the master of the cowhouse, coming thither,
and seeing his irons, said: "For God's sake, who are you?"

[10]

Sheppard said he was an unfortunate young fellow who,
having bad a bastard child sworn to him and not being
able to give security to the parish for its support, had
been sent to Bridewell, from whence he had made his
escape. The man said that if that was all it did not much
signify; but he did not care how soon he was gone, for he
did not like his looks.
   Soon after he was gone Sheppard saw a journeyman
shoemaker, to whom he told the same story of the bastard
child, and offered him twenty shillings if he would procure a
smith's hammer and a punch. The poor man, tempted by
the reward, procured them accordingly, and assisted him in
getting rid of his irons, which work was completed by five
o'clock in the evening.
   When night came on, our adventurer tied a handkerchief
about his head, tore his woollen cap in several places, and
likewise tore his coat and stockings, so as to have the appear-
ance of a beggar; and in this condition he went to a cellar
near Charing Cross, where he supped on roast veal and
listened to the conversation of the company, all of whom
were talking of the escape of Sheppard.
   On the Monday he sheltered himself at a public-house
of little trade in Rupert Street, and conversing with the
landlady about Sheppard told her it was impossible for
him to get out of the kingdom, and that the keepers would
certainly have him again in a few days; on which the
woman wished that a curse might fall on those who should
betray him. Remaining in this place till evening, he went
into the Haymarket, where a crowd of people were surround-
ing two ballad-singers and listening to a song made on his
adventures and escape.
   On the next day he hired a garret in Newport Market,
and soon afterwards, dressing himself like a porter, he went
to Blackfriars, to the house of Mr Applebee, printer of the
dying speeches, and delivered a letter, in which he ridiculed
the printer and the ordinary of Newgate, and enclosed a
letter for one of the keepers of Newgate.
   Some nights after this he broke open the shop of Mr

[11]

Rawlins, a pawnbroker in Drury Lane, where he stole a
sword, a suit of wearing apparel, some snuff-boxes, rings,
watches and other effects to a considerable amount. Deter-
mining to have the appearance of a gentleman among his
old acquaintances in Drury Lane and Clare Market, he
dressed himself in a suit of black and a tie-wig, wore a
ruffled shirt, a silver-hilted sword, a diamond ring and a gold
watch; though he knew that diligent search was being made
for him at that very time.
   On the 31st of October he dined with two women at a
public-house in Newgate Street, and about four in the after-
noon they all passed under Newgate in a hackney-coach,
having first drawn up the blinds. Going in the evening to
a public-house in Maypole Alley, Clare Market, Sheppard
sent for his mother and treated her with brandy, when the
poor woman dropped upon her knees and begged he would
immediately quit the kingdom, which he promised to do,
but had no intention of keeping his word.
   Being now grown valiant through an excess of liquor he
wandered from ale-houses to gin-shops in the neighbour-
hood till near twelve o'clock at night, when he was appre-
hended, in consequence of the information of an ale-house
boy who knew him. When taken into custody he was quite
senseless, from the quantity and variety of liquors he had
drunk, and was conveyed to Newgate in a coach, without
being capable of making the least resistance, though he
had two pistols then in his possession.
   His fame was now so much increased by his exploits
that he was visited by great numbers of people, and some
of them of the highest quality. He endeavoured to divert
them by a recital of the particulars of many robberies in
which he had been concerned; and when any nobleman
came to see him he never failed to beg that they would
intercede with the King for a pardon, to which he thought
that his singular dexterity gave him some pretensions.
   Having been already convicted, he was carried to the bar
of the Court of King's Bench on the 10th of November,
and the record of the conviction being read, and an affidavit

[12]

being made that he was the same John Sheppard mentioned
in the record, sentence of death was passed upon him by
Mr Justice Powis, and a rule of court was made for his
execution on the Monday following.
   He regularly attended the prayers in the chapel ; but,
though he behaved with decency there, he affected mirth
before he went thither, and endeavoured to prevent any
degree of seriousness among the other prisoners on their
return.
   Even when the day of execution arrived Sheppard did
not appear to have given over all expectations of eluding
justice; for having been furnished with a penknife he put
it in his pocket, with the view, when the melancholy pro-
cession came opposite Little Turnstile, of cutting the cord
that bound his arms, and throwing himself out of the cart
among the crowd, to run through the narrow passage where
the sheriff's officers could not follow on horseback; and
he had no doubt but that he should make his escape, with
the assistance of the mob.
   It is not impossible that this scheme might have suc-
cecded; but before Sheppard left the press-yard one
Watson, an officer, searching his pockets, found the knife,
and was cut with it so as to occasion a great effusion of
blood.
   Sheppard had yet a further view to his preservation, even
after execution; for he desired his acquaintances to put
him into a warm bed as soon as he should be cut down, and
try to open a vein, which he had been told would restore
him to life.
   He behaved with great decency at the place of execution,
and confessed having committed two robberies for which he
had been tried and acquitted. He suffered in the twenty-
third year of his age. He died with difficulty, and was
much pitied by the surrounding multitude. When he
was cut down his body was delivered to his friends, who
carried him to a public-house in Long Acre, whence he
was removed in the evening and buried in the churchyard
of St Martin's-in-the-Fields.

[13]


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