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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

WILLIAM YORK

"The Boy Murderer," convicted of the Murder of another Child
in the Poorhouse of Eyke, in Suffolk, May, 1748

THIS sinner was but just turned ten years of age when
 he committed the dreadful crime. He was a pauper
in the poorhouse belonging to the parish of Eyke, in
Suffolk, and was committed, on the coroner's inquest, to
Ipswich Jail for the murder of Susan Mahew, another child,
of five years of age, who had been his bedfellow. The
following is his confession, taken and attested by a Justice
of the Peace, and which was, in part, proved on his trial,
with many corroborating circumstances of his guilt.
   He said that a trifling quarrel happening between them,
on the 13th of May, 1748, about ten in the morning, he
struck her with his open hand, and made her cry. That
she going out of the house to the dunghill, opposite to the
door, he followed her with a hook in his hand, with an in-
tent to kill her; but before he came up to her he set down
the hook, and went into the house for a knife; he then
came out again, took hold of the girl's left hand, and cut
her wrist all round and to the bone, with his knife, and
then threw her down, and cut her to the bone just above the
elbow of the same arm. That after this he set his foot upon
her stomach, and cut her right arm round about, and to the
bone, both on the wrist and above the elbow. That he then
thought she would not die, and therefore took the hook
and cut her left thigh to the bone; and, observing she was
not dead yet, his next care was to conceal the murder. For
this purpose he filled a pail with water at a ditch, and washed
the blood off the child's body, buried it in the dunghill,
together with the blood that was spilt upon the ground,
and made the dunghill as smooth as he could; afterwards
he washed the knife and hook, and carried them into the
house, washed the blood off his own clothes, hid the child's
clothes in an old chamber, and then came down and got
his breakfast.

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   This " boy murder " was found guilty, and sentence
of death pronounced against him; but he was respited from
time to time, and on account of his tender years, was at
length pardoned.

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