The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

PETER M'CLOUD

Hanged for Housebreaking, on 27th of May, 1771, before
lie had attained the Age of Sixteen

THIS ill-fated youth was the son of a poor man at Shields,
 near Newcastle, who brought him to London while he
was quite a child. His father dying in a short time, the
boy was left to the care or, perhaps, more properly speaking,
to the neglect of his mother, who was a woman of very
doubtful character, and was said to encourage young lads
in the practice of theft.
   M'Cloud had been connected with a lad named Younger,
who had been concerned with him in a variety of irregular
practices. At length M'Cloud engaged himself on board
one of the colliers trading to Newcastle; and, while he
was absent, Younger accused his mother of having been
the receiver of stolen goods, the consequence of which was
that she was apprehended, and brought to trial, but was
discharged in defect of evidence.
   When M'Cloud returned from his voyage, and learned
in what manner his mother had been treated by Younger,

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he made the most solemn vow of taking vengeance on him,
whatever might be the consequence of such a procceding.
   That he might effect the ruin of his old companion in
iniquity he surrendered himself to a magistrate, and gave
information that he and Younger had been concerned in
a robbery ; on which the latter was soon taken into custody,
and committed to Newgate, M'Cloud being admitted an
evidence for the Crown against his presumed accomplice.
But at the ensuing sessions M'Cloud was incapable of giving
anything like evidence against his companion, who was of
course acquitted, and the scheme of revenge was consequently
frustrated.
   It is no less astonishing than true that, notwithstanding
what had passed, these young fellows soon renewed their
former connection ; so that whatever degree of malice might
have harboured in the breast of M'Cloud, he seemed to have
forgotten it in the wish to recommence his depredations on
the public with his former accomplice in iniquity.
   They now joined, with five or six other boys, in the practice
of picking pockets, in which, for some time, they met with
too much success ; but their thefts were of the lowest kind,
being principally confined to the stealing of handkerchiefs,
in the practice of which they were frequently detected, but
dismissed after receiving the discipline of the horse-pond.
M'Cloud, in particular, had been so often dragged through
horse-ponds, and exposed to the derision of the public,
that he seemed to have lost all sense of shame, and his paltry
gains by theft consoled him for the ignominy that attended
it. He was three times tried at the Old Bailey for different
offences, and had repeatedly the good fortune to escape.
   At length, after a series of lessons in the picking of
pockets, the gang of young villains determined to commence
housebreaking, for which they were qualified not so much
by their strength as by their artifice. They furnished them-
selves with a variety of tools proper for the wrenching of
doors and window-shutters. Occasionally they would climb
over roofs, enter at the garret windows of houses, and descend
to the lower rooms to commit their robberies; and at other

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times they would enter through any small opening that had
been casually left unguarded.
   At length three of the gang, of whom M'Cloud was one,
repaired to Poplar, where they broke open the house of
Joseph Hankey, Esq., in the dead of night. The family
were all asleep ; but the barking of a dog awoke one of
the servants, who alarmed the rest, and begged them to
oppose the intruders. Two of the thieves made an im-
mediate escape, but M'Cloud was apprehended, and lodged
in the watch-house.
   On the following day he was carried before a magistrate,
who committed him to Newgate, and at the next sessions
held at the Old Bailey he was brought to trial, capitally
convicted, and sentenced to die.
   When he arrived at the fatal tree he requested a person
to beg that his mother would not unreasonably grieve at
his death, as he had hopes that he was departing to the
regions of eternal glory. He suffered at Tyburn, on the
27th of May, 1771, in the sixteenth year of his age.

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