The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

JAMES BOLLAND

A Sheriff Officer, and a most unconscionable Villain,
executed at Tyburn, 18th of March, 1772, for Forgery

JAMES BOLLAND was the son of a butcher. The
youth gave early proofs of a profligate turn of mind, and
constantly associated with worthless people of both sexes.
The term of his servitude being expired, Bolland opened
a shop in the borough of Southwark, and his business
afforded him a very favourable prospect of success; but
through his irregularity and extravagance his trade gradually
declined, and, to free himself from some embarrassments
which his misconduct had produced, he sold his effects.
Bolland's favourite associates for some years had been
bailiffs, bailiffs' followers, thief-takers, and runners to the
different prisons; and, the natural cruelty of his disposition
being encouraged by the example of the worthless people
in whose company he spent the greatest part of his time,
he resolved to gain a maintenance by preying upon the
distresses of his fellow-creatures.
   Having procured himself to be appointed one of the
officers to the sheriff of the county of Surrey, he hired a
house at the bottom of Falcon Court, facing St George's
Church, Southwark; and, having fitted it up in the manner
of a prison, it was soon inhabited by a number of unfortunate
persons. The people he arrested who were in indigent
circumstances he took to jail as soon as the law would
permit, but such as were in a different situation were
entertained in his house till all their money was spent, or till
they insisted upon going to prison to avoid further imposi-
tion, or till the writs by which they were detained became
returnable. The money he extorted from his guests by
divers stratagems was so considerable that he held the fees
usually paid at lock-up houses as almost beneath his regard,
and frequently distributed them among his followers and
other servants.
   Bolland was continually endeavouring to encourage

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card-playing in his house; and when his unfortunate guests
had recourse to that diversion he seldom failed to join in the
game; and though he suffered no opportunity of cheating
them, even in the most palpable manner, to escape him,
they were obliged to submit to the insult and imposition;
for if they ventured to expostulate on the unfairness of his
proceedings it was his custom to discharge a volley of
blasphemous oaths, and to threaten that he would instantly
take them to jail for daring to affront him in his own
house.
   Though the emoluments arising from the infamous prac-
tices of Bolland were very considerable, they were not equal
to the expenses of his profligate course of life, and he pro-
cured a person to issue out a commission of bankruptcy
against him; but before the commission took place he
secreted his most valuable effects. He further defrauded
his creditors by giving notes and other securities to a number
of people who had received no valuable considerations from
him; and by means of these nominal creditors he obtained
his certificate in a very short time.
   The infamous practices of Bolland had now rendered
his character so notorious that the attorneys imagined that
if they continued to employ him they should be reflected
upon for encouraging so abandoned a villain; and such
repeated and heavy complaints were made against him that
his business rapidly declined. But instead of endeavour-
ing to obtain better success by an amendment of his
conduct he seized every opportunity of practising extortion
and fraud with greater rapacity, and became a still more
abominable pest to society.
   Bolland was an almost daily frequenter of places where
billiards and other games were practised ; and at one of
these meetings he fell into company with a gentleman who
employed him to arrest the captain of a ship in the East India
service for a debt of three hundred pounds, and promised
him a handsome compliment on condition that he recovered
the money, or took the prisoner into custody. The follow-
ing morning the gentleman set out for the country, and in

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the course of the day Bolland arrested the captain, who
immediately paid the debt, and costs.
   In a short time the captain proceeded on his voyage, and
the gentleman at whose suit he had been arrested returned
to London soon afterwards. Bolland waited upon him,
and said that, though he had made use of every stratagem
he could possibly devise, the captain had eluded all his art,
and got to sea; and in order to enhance the promised
gratuity he pretended that his extraordinary vigilance to
serve the writ had involved him in much trouble, and some
expense, and the gentleman, being thus deceived, made
Bolland a handsome present.
   Upon the return of the ship from the East Indies another
writ was taken out; but, Bolland having gone to a horse
race, it was given to another officer. The bailiff went to
Blackwall, and presently found the captain, and said he must
either pay the three hundred pounds or go with him to a
place of security. But when the captain showed the officer
Bolland's receipt for the money he returned to town and
informed his employer that the debt was discharged to
Bolland previous to the captain's sailing for India.
   A suit at law was now instituted against Bolland for the
recovery of three hundred pounds. Justice was so indis-
putably clear on the side of the plaintiff that Bolland knew
he must inevitably be cast if the matter came to trial ; yet,
at a considerable expense, he protracted a judicial decision
of the case, imagining his adversary would give up his
claim rather than pursue him through all the delays and
chicanery of the law.
   The cause at length was brought to a hearing, and judg-
ment was pronounced in favour of the plaintiff. Bolland,
being surrendered by his bail, was taken in execution. He
was conducted to a lock-up house, where he remained
some time, and then moved himself by habeas corpus to
the Fleet Prison, from which place he was released by
virtue of an Act of Insolvency.
   Bolland and a person with whom he had contracted an
acquaintance in the Fleet were enlarged nearly at the same

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time; and the latter soon after went into business, and
found means to procure bondsmen for his companion, who
was again appointed an officer to the Sheriff of Middlesex.
Bolland now hired a large house in Great Shire Lane, near
Temple Bar, but, that the outward appearance might not
convey an intimation of the service and tyrannical treatment
that was to be exercised within, the windows were not, ac-
cording to the general custom with spunging-houses, secured
with iron bars.
   When prisoners came into the house, he informed them
that it was his custom to charge six shillings per day for
board and lodging; adding that the entertainment would
be such as should give universal satisfaction, and that all
trouble and disagreements concerning reckonings would
be avoided; and such as refused to comply with the
exorbitant terms were instantly conducted to jail. When
Bolland's prisoners appeared inclined to remove to the
King's Bench or Fleet he used every artifice he could
suggest for detaining them in his house till they had ex-
hausted the means of supplying his extravagant avarice;
but when their money was expended no entreaties could
prevail on the merciless villain to give them credit for the
most trifling article, or to suffer them to continue another
hour in his house.
   He also defrauded a great number of tradesmen of
property to a considerable amount, and among them was
an upholsterer, of whom he obtained household furniture to
the value of two hundred pounds, under false pretences.
   Though Bolland was a married man, he was violently
addicted to the company of abandoned women; and when
his wife expostulated on the impropriety of his illicit con-
nections he applied to her the most disgraceful epithets,
accompanied with volleys of profane oaths, and frequently
beat her in a barbarous manner. His conversation proved
the vulgarity of his breeding, and his whole behaviour
marked him as a worthless and detestable character.
   A young gentleman whose imprudences had drawn upon
him the displeasure of his friends was arrested at the suit

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of his tailor, and confined in Bolland's house. His money
was soon expended, and despairing of being able to effect
a compromise with his creditor he expressed a desire to
be moved to the King's Bench or the Fleet. Bolland in
formed him that he must be taken to Newgate, that being
the jail for the county, and that he could not be moved to
either of the other prisons but by means of a writ of habeas
corpus.
   The young gentleman was greatly alarmed at the idea
of being confined in Newgate, which he supposed to be a
place for the reception of felons only. Bolland perceived his
anxiety, and advised him to recall his resolution, saying that
if he would follow his directions a method might still be
adopted for relieving him from all his difficulties. Anxious
to recover his liberty, the youth said that if Bolland would
signify the means by which so desirable a purpose was to be
obtained he would gladly embrace the proposal, and ever
consider him as his most generous benefactor. Thereupon
Bolland informed him that he would immediately procure
bail, and then recommended him to different tradesmen, of
whom he might obtain a chariot and horses, household
furniture and other effects, on credit ; adding, that he would
find no difficulty in obtaining a fortune by marriage before
he would be called upon for the discharge of his debts. 
   The young man was released on the bail of two of
Bolland's accomplices, a chariot was procured, and a house
hired and furnished very elegantly; and one of Bolland's
followers assumed the character of a footman, from the
double motive of assisting in the scheme of villainy and
reporting to his principal all the particulars of the conduct
of the imprudent young man. Reports were industriously
propagated that the youth was heir to an immense fortune;
and, by a variety of stratagems, effects to a considerable
amount were obtained from different tradesmen, the greater
part of which were deposited in Bolland's house, by way of
security to him for the bail he had procured. When pay-
ment for the furniture and other effects was demanded, the
creditors were for some time amused by a variety of plausible

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pretences; but at length they became exceedingly impor-
tunate for their money, and Bolland, now concluding that
the young man could no longer be made subservient to his
villainous stratagems, surrendered him in discharge of his
bail, and caused him to be conveyed to Newgate.
   The persons whom he had been seduced to defraud were
no sooner acquainted with the imprisonment of the young
adventurer than they lodged detainers against him. His
unfortunate connections having greatly exasperated his
relations and friends, they refused to afford him any kind
of assistance, and his situation became truly deplorable.
His present distress, and the upbraidings, of conscience
for the impropriety of his conduct, overwhelmed him with
affliction, which soon put a period to his life.
   Bolland, regarding the wreck he had occasioned with
apathy, went on in his course of wickedness. He provided
fictitious bail for persons who were under arrest, and when
he knew that the persons whom he himself had arrested were
not in desperate circumstances he frequently released them,
after exacting money from them, and the promise to sur-
render if they could not settle matters with their creditors.
He applied to these people to become bail for others, who
paid him in proportion to the sums for which they were
arrested; and, circumstanced as they were, it was seldom
that he met with a refusal, for, upon their making the least
hesitation, he threatened to take them into custody and
convey them instantly to prison.
   He provided genteel apparel for Jews, and other men in
desperate circumstances, and encouraged them to commit
perjury, by bribing them to swear themselves housekeepers
and men of property, in order that their bail might be
admitted.
   Having supplied two men of most profligate character
with genteel clothes, they attended him to Westminster
Hall, and there justified bail for sums to a considerable
amount, though they were not possessed of property to the
value of twenty shillings. After the business these three in
famous associates adjourned to a tavern in Covent Garden,

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and, while they were regaling themselves, some of Sir John
Fielding's officers took the two men who had justified bail
into custody, on a charge of highway robbery. They were
convicted at the ensuing sessions at the Old Bailey, and soon
afterwards Bolland, being a sheriff's officer, attended them to
Tyburn, where they were hanged in the very apparel that
he himself had provided for them.
   A publican in Cecil Street in the Strand, named Wilkinson,
went into Lancashire, in the year 1768, upon a visit to his
relations, leaving the care of his house to a female servant.
Upon the landlord's return he found that two men had
taken possession of his household goods and stock of
liquors, under a warrant of distress. He asked by what
authority. They had made a seizure of his effects; and the
reply was, that if he presumed to dispute their authority
they would knock out his brains, or put him to death in
some other manner.
   Wilkinson made application to Justice Kynaston, and
made an affidavit that Bolland had no legal claim upon
him. A warrant was granted for the recovery of Wilkinson's
goods, but before it could be put into execution the greater
part of them had been moved from the premises. The
following day Bolland caused Wilkinson to be arrested for
five hundred and fifty pounds, which was falsely alleged
to be a debt he had some time before contracted. The
unfortunate Wilkinson, being unable to procure bail for
so considerable a sum, moved himself to the King's Bench.
The attorney employed by Wilkinson was an accomplice
of Bolland, and, under the pretence of defending him
against the machinations of that accomplished villain, he
extorted from him his last shilling; and after the unhappy
man had suffered a long imprisonment, in a most deplor-
able state of poverty, he was restored to liberty, by virtue
of an Act of Insolvency.
   A captain in the navy going on a voyage, and leaving
his wife insufficiently provided with money, she contracted
a debt to the amount of thirty pounds, for which she gave
a note. The note not being paid when it became due, the

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creditor ordered Bolland to serve a writ upon the unhappy
woman. After she had remained some days a prisoner in
his house he procured bail for her, on her paying him five
guineas. In a few days she was again taken into custody,
Bolland urging that, upon making inquiry into her affairs,
the bail deemed themselves not secure, and had surrendered
her from motives of prudence. Terrified at the idea of
going to prison she paid him ten guineas to procure bail a
second time ; but he insisted on having a bond to confess
judgment for the furniture of her house, as a collateral
security. Being ignorant of the nature of the security
proposed, she complied with the terms offered by the villain,
who, on the following day, entered upon judgment, and took
possession of her effects. When she discovered that she
had been made a dupe to the consummate art and villainy
of Bolland, the unfortunate woman was driven almost to
distraction, and while in that state of mind she attempted
to set fire to the house, in consequence of which a warrant
was granted to apprehend her, and she was accordingly
committed to Newgate. In a short time the husband re-
turned to England, and Bolland bribed an infamous woman
to swear a false debt against him, in consequence of which
he was arrested, and being in confinement at the time of
his wife's trial at the Old Bailey, she was deprived of that
assistance he might have afforded her. She was convicted,
and sentenced to suffer death ; but her cause being espoused
by a number of humane persons, they drew up an authentic
state of her case, which was presented to the King, who was
graciously pleased to grant her an unconditional pardon.
   Bolland was ordered by an attorney in the City to serve
a writ on a colonel in his Majesty's service for one hundred
pounds, and he arrested the gentleman the next day and was
paid the debt and costs ; but, instead of delivering the money
for the plaintiff's use, he declared that he had not served
the writ. The attorney, however, soon learned that the debt
was discharged, and commenced a suit against the sheriffs;
and the persons who had become sureties for Bolland were
compelled to pay the hundred pounds, with full costs.

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   The colonel had neglected to take Bolland's receipt,
and of this circumstance the villain determined to avail
himself. He, a second time, arrested the gentleman for
one hundred pounds. The action was bailed, and a trial
ensued, in the course of which a witness swore that he was
present when the colonel paid Bolland one hundred pounds,
and costs, in discharge of the writ. Thereupon the jury
pronounced in favour of the colonel.
   Though Bolland's character was notorious throughout
the kingdom, he might, perhaps, have continued his depre-
dations much longer had not his infamous practices been
exposed in the newspapers. When the sheriffs were in-
formed of Bolland's villainy they were highly exasperated
against him, and suspended him from acting as their officer,
and assigned the bail bonds as security, by which the parties
he had injured might obtain some recompense.
   The office of upper City Marshal becoming vacant by
the decease of Osmond Cook, Esq., Bolland determined to
dispose of part of his infamously acquired property in the
purchase thereof. The place was put up for sale by auction,
and he became the purchaser for two thousand, four hundred
pounds. Having paid the deposit money, it was lodged
in the Chamberlain's office, and he anxiously waited for the
approbation of the Court of Aldermen, which was all that
was wanted to give him that power over the citizens which
he was predetermined to abuse.
   A letter was addressed to the Lord Mayor and Court of
Aldermen exhibiting Bolland's character in all its horrid
deformity, and on proper inquiries being made the facts
appeared to be well founded; in consequence of which the
Court of Aldermen refused him the place, and ordered the
Chamberlain to return the deposit money.
   He declared that he would commence a suit at law against
the Court of Aldermen for the recovery of damages; and
when the recorder communicated to him the very strong
reasons that had induced the Court to deem him unqualified
for the place of City Marshal he behaved in a manner
extremely reprehensible.

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His last crime was forging the endorsement of a bill of
exchange for one hundred pounds, for which he was appre-
bended, and tried at the Old Bailey. His counsel exerted
their utmost abilities to prove that he had not committed
forgery, but the jury found him guilty of the indictment.
When sentence of death had been pronounced against him
the recorder pathetically exhorted him to employ the short
time he had to live in preparing for eternity.
   On the morning of his execution he acknowledged that
he had been guilty of innumerable sins, but declared that
the fact for which he was to die was not committed with a
view to defraud. He was hanged at Tyburn, and his body
was taken to Highgate in a hearse, and in the evening
carried to an undertaker's in Prince's Street, Drury Lane,
whence it was conveyed to Bunhill Fields for interment.

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