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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

THOMAS DENTON

His Misapplied Talents led to his Downfall, and he was
executed before Newgate, 1st of July, 1789 for
making Base Coin

THOMAS DENTON was born in the north part of
Yorkshire. He was bound apprentice to a tinman,
and served his time with much credit to himself and profit
to his master. His genius, it appears, expanded beyond
the making of kettles, for he evinced a taste for literature.
He opened a bookseller's shop in the city of York, where
he particularly attended to works on mechanism ; and,
with a superficial store of such arts, he gave up his few
shelves of books and, on their sale, went as an adventurer
to the great mart of genius, London.
   He had formed no settled plan of life, but determined
to employ some days in viewing minutely the great
metropolis. Passing through the parish of St James's, his

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attention was arrested by some foreigners exhibiting a speak-
ing figure. He immediately paid his admission, and took a
very correct examination of the automaton. Returning to
his lodgings, he fancied that he could construct a similar
machine equal to that of the ingenious foreigner, and he
determined, without further delay, to set about this work.
Difficulties, however, insurmountable to a man without
genius and perseverance, presented themselves. An un-
known individual as he was, he had to furnish himself, in
a strange place, with a workshop, tools and materials. Yet
man's industry, which, he had read, had levelled mountains,
diverted the course of large rivers, and carried navigation
into the bowels of the earth, would hardly stop at forming
the figure of a pigmy. To set to work took time, labour
and money; but once seated thereat, his ingenuity soon
made rapid progress, and, with but one more hired view
of the original, he completed a far superior figure to that of
the vaunting German.
   His work having been deemed the most complete, he
wisely determined against all opposition in London, where
the milk of such a rare show had already been skimmed,
and accordingly set off with it into the country. There he
collected vast sums of money at each city which he pitched
upon for the exhibition of his famous speaking figure.
   His active mind, it seems, still was discontented. He,
looking upon his first essay in mechanism as far inferior to
his expanded ideas, determined upon returning to London,
in order to undertake a superior work. He soon found a
purchaser for the speaking figure (a printer in the City of
London, who melted it down for his types) and set about
a writing automaton. This, too, he finished with most
exquisite and ingenious workmanship.
   The artificial penman delighted him no longer than the
speaker; and he next applied himself to chemistry. In
pursuit of this science he met with Pinetti's book of de-
ceptions, which he translated (having previously to learn
the language in which it was written), and added to it
various notes and observations.

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   He also made himself master of an improvement in the
art of plating coach harness. Conceiving this profitable
branch of business united to that of a bookseller would
make his fortune, he for some time carried on both in
Holborn. Here his good fortune, by his own indiscretion,
failed him. The art, thus self-acquired, of plating metal,
led him into company with others professing that branch
of business, and among them was a coiner of base shillings.
   Here, too, as with the Germans, he fancied he could far
excel in this criminal proceeding ; and the powers that
assisted him to make several mathematical instruments, as
pentagraphs, etc., enabled him to imitate the current coin
of the kingdom in a manner that deceived the best judges,
and which upon his trial at the Old Bailey for that offence
kept the Court in doubt for seven hours. Nor could he
be convicted of coining, but he was found guilty of having
implements for coining in his possession, which alone proved
fatal to him.
   He was condemned to die; and we are reluctant in
adding to the character of such a man of genius as Thomas
Denton that his behaviour after condemnation was  impious
in the extreme. To sum up the whole, he died a professed
infidel.
   A few minutes before he was brought out of his cell for
execution he requested pen, ink and paper; and in the
most composed manner sat down and wrote the following
letter:-

   DEAR FATHER AND MOTHER,-When you receive this
I shall be gone to that country from whence no traveller
returns. Don't cast any reflections on my wife, the best of
mothers, and the best of women; and if ever woman went
to heaven, she will. If I had taken her advice I should not
have been in this situation. God bless my poor Dick [his
son]. The bell is tolling. Adieu !
                                                                    T. DENTON.

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