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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

JOHN DONELLAN, ESQ

Executed for the Murder of Sir Theodosius Boughton, 
Bart., his Brother-in-Law, 2nd of April, 1781

JOHN DONELLAN had been a captain in the army,
and was the son of Colonel Donellan. He certainly dis-
tinguished himself as a good soldier, for not only had he
been much wounded in the service, but, if his own account
may be credited, he was singularly instrumental in the taking
of Mazulapatam. Being appointed, however, one of the
four agents for prize-money, he condescended to receive
presents from some black merchants, to whom part of their
effects had been ordered to be restored, for which he was
tried by a court martial, and cashiered. He subsequently
purchased a share in the Pantheon, where he figured for
some time as master of ceremonies. After a variety of
applications he at length obtained a certificate from the
War Office that he had behaved in the East Indies " like
a gallant officer " ; in consequence of which he was put
upon half-pay in the 39th Regiment. In June, 1777, he
married Miss Boughton; and on Friday, 30th of March,
1781, he was tried at the assizes at Warwick for the wil-
ful murder of Sir Theodosius Edward Allesley Boughton,
Bart., his brother-in-law.
   Mr Powell, apothecary of Rugby, deposed that on
Wednesday morning, the 27th of February, he was sent
for to Lawton Hall, and on his arrival there, at a little before
nine o'clock, Captain Donellan conducted him to the apart-
ment of Sir Theodosius. On entering, he perceived that
the baronet was dead; and on examining the body he con-
cluded that it was about an hour since life had fled. He
had some conversation with Captain Donellan with regard

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to the deceased, and he was told by him that he had " died
in convulsions."
   Lady Boughton, the mother of the deceased, deposed
that Sir Theodosius was twenty years old on the 3rd of
August past. On his coming of age he would have been
entitled to above two thousand pounds a year, and in the
event of his dying a minor the greater part of his fortune
was to descend to his sister, the wife of Mr Donellan. It
was known in the family on the evening of Tuesday, the
26th that Sir Theodosius was to take his physic the next
morning. He used to put his physic in the dressing-room.
He happened once to omit to take it; upon which Mr
Donellan said: " Why don't you set it in your outer room? --
then you would not so soon forget it." After this he several
times put the medicines upon his shelf over the chimney-
piece in his outer room. On the evening of Tuesday, the
26th, about six o'clock, Sir Theodosius went out fishing
attended only by one servant, Samuel Frost. Witness and
Mrs Donellan. took a walk in the garden, and were there
over an hour. To the best of her recollection she had seen
nothing of Mr Donellan after dinner till about seven o'clock,
when he came out of the house door in the garden, and told
them that he had been to see them fishing, and that he
would have persuaded Sir Theodosius to come in, lest he
should take cold, but he could not. Sir Theodosius came
home a little after nine, apparently very well ; he went
up into his own room soon after, and then to bed. He
requested her to call him the next morning and give him
his physic.
  She accordingly went into his room about seven in the
morning, when he appeared to be very well. She asked him
where the bottle was, and he said: " It stands there upon
the shelf." He desired her to read the label, which she
accordingly did, and found there was written upon it:
" Purging draught for Sir Theodosius Boughton." As he
was taking it he observed that it smelled and tasted very
nauseous ; upon which she said: " I think it smells very
strongly like bitter almonds." He then remarked that he

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thought he should not be able to keep the medicine upon
his stomach.
   Here a bottle was delivered to Lady Boughton containing
the genuine draught, which she was desired to smell, and
inform the Court whether it smelled like the medicine Sir
Theodosius took. She answered in the negative. She was
then desired to smell another containing the draught, with
the addition of laurel-water, which she said had a smell very
much like that of the medicine she gave to Sir Theodosius.
Lady Boughton then proceeded with her evidence. Two
minutes after Sir Theodosius had taken the draught he
struggled very much. It appeared to her as if it was to
keep the draught down. He made a prodigious rattling in
his stomach, and guggling ; and these symptoms continued
about ten minutes. He then seemed as if he were going to
sleep, or inclined to doze; and, perceiving him a little
composed, she went out of the room. She returned in about
five minutes, and to her great surprise found him with his
eyes fixed upwards, his teeth clenched, and foam running
out of his mouth. She instantly desired a servant to take
the first horse he could get and go for Mr Powell.
   She saw Mr Donellan less than five minutes after. He
came into the room where Sir Theodosius lay, and said to
her: " What do you want? " She answered that she wanted
to inform him what a terrible thing had happened ; that it
was an unaccountable thing in the doctor to send such
medicine, for if it had been taken by a dog it would have
killed it; and she did not think her son would live. He
inquired in what way Sir Theodosius then was. When
told, he asked her where the physic bottle was ; on which
she showed him two draughts; when he took up one of
the bottles and said, "Is this it?" she answered, "Yes."
He then rinsed it, and emptied it into some dirty water
that was in a washhand-basin ; and on his doing so she
said: " What are you at? You should not meddle with
the bottles." Upon that he snatched up the other bottle
and rinsed it, and then he put his finger to it and tasted it.
She repeated that he ought not to meddle with the bottles ;

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upon which he replied that he did it to taste it. Two
servants, named Sarah Blundell and Catherine Amos, after-
wards came into the room, and he desired the former to
take away the basin and the bottles, and he put the bottles
into her hands. The witness however, took the bottles
from her and set them down, bidding her not to touch
them ; and the prisoner then desired that the room might
be cleaned, and the dirty clothes thrown into the inner
room. This being done, the witness turned her back for a
moment on which the prisoner again handed the servant the
bottles, and bade her take them away, and she accordingly
removed them.
   Witness soon afterwards went into the parlour, where
she found Mr and Mrs Donellan; and the former told his
wife that her mother had been pleased to take notice of
his washing the bottles, and that he did not know what he
should have done if he had not thought of saying that he
had put the water into them to put his finger to it to taste.
   Dr Rattray, of Coventry, described the external appear-
ances of the body, and its appearances in the dissecting.
He was asked whether, as he had heard the evidence of Mr
Powell and Lady Boughton, he could, from that evidence,
totally independent of the appearances he had described,
form a judgment as to the cause of the death of Sir Theo-
dosius. He answered that, exclusive of these appearances,
he was of opinion, from the symptoms that followed the
taking of the draught, that it was poison, and the certain
cause of his death. Being desired to smell the bottle, and
asked what was the noxious medicine in it, he said it was
a distillation of laurel leaves, called laurel-water. Here he
entered into a detail of several experiments on animals,
tending to show the instantaneous and mortal effects of the
laurel-water. He knew nothing in medicine that corre-
sponded in smell with that mixture, which was like that of
bitter almonds. He further said that the quantity of laurel-
water contained in the bottle shown to him was sufficient to
cause the death of any human creature; and that the appear-
ance of the body confirmed him in his opinion that the

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deceased was poisoned, so far as, upon viewing a body so
long after the death of the subject, one could be allowed to
form a judgment upon such appearances.
   Mr Wilmer and Dr Parsons, professor of anatomy at
Oxford, confirmed the evidence of Dr Rattray.
   John Darbyshire deposed that he had been a prisoner in
Warwick jail for debt, and that Mr Donellan and he had
had a bed in the same room for a month or five weeks.
He remembered to have had a conversation with him about
Sir Theodosius being poisoned. On his asking him whether
the body was poisoned or not, he said there was no doubt
of it. The witness said: " For God's sake, Captain, who
could do it? " He answered it was amongst themselves;
he had no hand in it. The witness asked whom he meant
by themselves. He said: " Sir Theodosius himself, Lady
Boughton, the footman and the apothecary." The witness
replied, " Sure, Sir Theodosius could not do it himself ! "
He said he did not think he did -- he could not believe he
would. The witness answered: " The apothecary could
hardly do it -- he would lose a good patient; the footman
could have no interest in it ; and it is unnatural to suppose
that Lady Boughton would do it." The Captain said how
covetous Lady Boughton was: she had received an anony-
mous letter the day after Sir Theodosius's death charging
her plump with poisoning him; that she called him and
read it to him, and trembled. She desired he would not
let his wife know of that letter, and asked him if he would
give up his right to the personal estate, and to some estates
of about two hundred pounds a year belonging to the
family. The conversation was about a month after the
Captain came into the jail. At other times he said that
it was impossible he could do a thing that never was in his
power.
    This being the chief evidence, the prisoner, in his defence,
pleaded a total ignorance of the fact, and several respectable
characters bore testimony to his integrity. The jury, how-
ever, found him guilty, and he received sentence of death.
   At seven o'clock on the next day, the 2nd of April, 1781,

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he was carried to the place of execution at Warwick, in a
mourning-coach, followed by a hearse and the sheriff officers
in deep mourning. As he went on he frequently put his
head out of the coach, desiring the prayers of the people
around him.
   On his arrival at the fatal spot he alighted from the coach
and, ascending a few steps of the ladder, prayed for a con-
siderable time, and then joined in the usual service with
the. greatest appearance of devotion ; he next, in an audible
tone of voice, addressed the spectators to this effect : that
as he was then going to appear before God, to Whom all
deceit was known, he solemnly declared that he was inno-
cent of the crime for which he was to suffer; that he had
drawn up a vindication of himself, which he hoped the
world would believe, for it was of more consequence to
him to speak truth than falsehood, and he had no doubt but
that time would reveal the many mysteries that had arisen
in his trial.
   After praying fervently some time he let his handker-
chief fall -- a signal agreed upon between him and the
executioner -- and was launched into eternity. When the
body had hung the usual time it was put into a black coffin
and conveyed to the town hall to be dissected.

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