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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

HENRY JONES, FRANCIS PHOENIX AND
CHARLES BURTON

Executed at Tyburn, 3rd of February, 1772, for Burglary 
at the House of Sir Robert Ladbroke, a City Banker

THIS was a daring robbery, committed by breaking
into the house of Sir Robert Ladbroke, an alderman
and banker, in the City of London.
   Notwithstanding the precautions taken by bankers against
robbers, and particularly housebreakers, we have many in-
stances of men being hardy enough to break into their strong-
rooms and therefrom steal cash, silver-plate, or whatever
valuables might have been therein deposited.
  The plunder to which bankers were further liable was
from knavish clerks running off with large sums which
they were in the daily habit of collecting. But their profits
being enormous, and without risk (for surely those who can-
not take care of their own money ought to pay those hand-
somely who keep it safe for them), they still made immense
fortunes.
   Mr Child, the celebrated banker at Temple Bar, would
not give his consent to his daughter marrying the Earl of
Westmorland; and actually pursued the young couple in
their flight to Gretna Green, solely because the purse-proud
parent had a fortune to portion her to a duke.
   In the year 1755 the cashier of a bank in Dublin, kept
by a Quaker, ran off with no less a sum than eighty-four
thousand pounds of their money, which caused business
there to be at a standstill, other houses failing with the loss.
He was apprehended, and lodged at Mr Sheriff Crampton's

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and only twenty-four thousand pounds was found upon
him.
   Enormous as this robbery was, capital punishment could
not reach him; it was, by the law, held merely a breach of
trust.
   The daring gang, the immediate subjects of the case
before us, on the night of the 20th of December, 1771,
with iron crowbars wrenched open the doors of the house
of Sir Robert Ladbroke, on St Peter's Hill, and though the
whole family were in bed, and five men-servants in the
house, yet the villains effected their purpose, and escaped
undiscovered.
   The articles which at the time were advertised to have
been stolen on this occasion were :
 
 
Sir Robert's gold chain, the insignia of his office,
as alderman of London, worth
  L 100
An alderman's wife's gold chain         80
Several pieces of plate       100
A coronation medal, a broad 25s. piece, a guinea
of the coin of Oliver Cromwell, a guinea of the
coin of George I. and other pieces
        40
In old crown-pieces, about         15
Two gold snuff-boxes         20
A brilliant breast-buckle         25
A diamond hoop-ring         20
A pair of valuable Moco studs          10
A pair of cluster-stone buttons         10
And other articles, at a small computation         30 L450

   The robbers, finding this large booty in the apartment
they first broke open, appear to have been satisfied, for
they searched no other part of the house. A silver-hilted
sword, which hung in the room, was not carried off, though
it was taken down and laid upon a chair. An iron crow was
found next morning in the passage.
   Though Sir Robert and his whole family slept so sound

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as not to hear what was going on below them, a gentleman
living at the next house was alarmed by a noise, which he
fancied arose from the wrenching open of a door and break-
ing into a house. He sprang out of bed, seized a blunder-
buss, and threw open his window. Observing a watchman
standing on the other side of the way, he asked him if
he had not heard a disturbance. The treacherous guardian
of the night answered that it was nothing but the wind, for
everything was safe in that quarter.
   The gentleman then asked him why he did not cry the
hour, as the clock had some time struck; to which the
watchman replied that he had called it, and, on being
contradicted, went surlily away.
   A short time after this another watchman, in passing,
saw that Sir Robert Ladbroke's house had been broken open,
and immediately gave the alarm; but the robbers had
decamped.
   In the morning the first watchman was sent for, but
he was nowhere to be found -- in fact, he was privy to the
villainy; and by such wicked connivance many robberies
were accomplished which could not have been effected if
watchmen had been honest and done their duty.
   The villains melted the gold articles ; and on their trial
a dispute arose between Sir Robert Ladbroke, the loser
of the gold, which had been cast into an ingot, and Mr Cox,
the purchaser. The latter urged that he had bought it in
the face of day, in an open shop, and at a fair price; while
Sir Robert insisted on a prior claim, of which he had been
violently deprived.
   The Court were inclined to favour Sir Robert, who,
finding this, offered it as a favour to Mr Cox; but he dis-
claimed all favour, standing up for his right to the ingot,
and then put it into his pocket. Thus he may be said to
have very wisely " pocketed the affront."
   The thieves were carried to Tyburn, and executed, on
the 3rd of February, 1772.

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