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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

SARAH METYARD AND SARAH MORGAN
 METYARD, HER DAUGHTER

Executed at Tyburn, 19th of  July, 1768, for the Cruel
Murders of Parish Apprentices

SARAH METYARD was a milliner, and the daughter
her assistant, in Bruton Street, Hanover Square,
London. In the year 1758 the mother had five appren-
tice girls bound to her from different parish workhouses,
among whom were Anne Naylor and her sister.
  Anne Naylor, being of a sickly constitution, was not
able to do so much work as the other apprentices about
the same age, and therefore she became the more immediate
object of the fury of the barbarous women, whose repeated
acts of cruelty at length occasioned the unhappy girl to
abscond. Being brought back, she was confined in an
upper apartment, and allowed each day no other sustenance
than a small piece of bread and a little water.
   Seizing an opportunity of escaping from her confine-
ment, unperceived she got into the street, and ran to a
milk-carrier, whom she begged to protect her, saying that if
she returned she must certainly perish, through the want of

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food and severe treatment she daily received. Being soon
missed, she was followed by the younger Metyard, who
seized her by the neck, forced her into the house, and
threw her upon the bed in the room where she had been
confined, and she was then seized by the old woman, who
held her down while the daughter beat her with the handle
of a broom in a most cruel manner.
   They afterwards put her into a back room on the second
storey, tied a cord round her waist, and her hands behind
her, and fastened her to the door in such a manner that it
was impossible for her either to sit or lie down. She was
compelled to remain in this situation for three successive
days; but they permitted her to go to bed at the usual
hours at night. Having received no kind of nutriment for
three days and two nights, her strength was so exhausted
that, being unable to walk upstairs, she crept to the garret,
where she lay on her hands and feet.
   While she remained tied up on the second floor the
other apprentices were ordered to work in an adjoining
apartment, that they might be deterred from disobedience
by being witnesses to the unhappy girl's sufferings; but
they were enjoined, on the penalty of being subjected to
equal severity, against affording her any kind of relief.
   On the fourth day she faltered in speech, and presently
afterwards expired. The other girls, seeing the whole weight
of her body supported by the strings which confined her
to the door, were greatly alarmed, and called out: " Miss
Sally ! Miss Sally ! Nanny does not move." The daughter
then came upstairs, saying: " If she does not move, I will
make her move " ; and then beat the deceased on the head
with the heel of a shoe.
   Perceivitig no signs of life, she called to her mother,
who came upstairs and ordered the strings that confined
the deceased to be cut ; she then laid the body across her
lap and directed one of the apprentices where to find a
bottle with some hartshorn drops.
   When the child had brought the drops, she and the other
girls were ordered to go downstairs ; and the mother and

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daughter, being convinced that the object of their barbarity
was dead, conveyed the body into the garret . They related
to the other apprentices that Nanny had been in a fit, but
was perfectly recovered, adding that she was locked into the
garret lest she should again run away; and, in order to
give an air of plausibililty to their tale, at noon the daughter
carried a plate of meat upstairs, saying it was for Nanny's
dinner.
   They locked the body of the deceased in a box on the
fourth day after the murder, and, having left the garret
door open and the street door on the jar, one of the appren-
tices was told to call Nanny down to dinner, and to tell her
that, if she promised to behave well in future, she would
be no longer confined. Upon the return of the child, she
said Nanny was not above-stairs ; and after a great parade
of searching every part of the house they reflected upon
her as being of an intractable disposition and pretended
she had run away.
   The sister of the deceased, who was apprenticed to the
same inhuman mistress, mentioned to a lodger in the house
that she was persuaded her sister was dead ; observing that
it was not probable she had gone away, since parts of her
apparel still remained in the garret. The suspicions of this
girl coming to the knowledge of the inhuman wretches, they,
with a view of preventing a discovery, cruelly murdered her,
and secreted the body.
   The body of Anne remained in the box two months,
during which time the garret door was kept locked, lest
the offensive smell shouild lead to a discovery. The stench
became so powerful that they judged it prudent to remove
the remains of the: unhappy victim of their barbarity; and
therefore, on the evening of the 25th of December, they
cut the body in pieces, and tied the head and trunk up in
one cloth and the limbs in another, excepting one hand, a
finger belonging to which had been amputated before death,
and that they resolved to burn.
   When the apprentices had gone to bed, the old woman
put the hand into the fire, saying: " The fire tells no tales."

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She intended to consume the entire remains of the un-
fortunate girl by fire but, afraid that the smell would give
rise to suspicion, changed that design, and took the bundles
to the gully-hole in Chick Lane and endeavoured to throw
the parts of the mangled corpse over the wall into the
common sewer; but being unable to effect that, she left
them among the mud and water that was collected before
the grate of the sewer.
   Some pieces of the body were discovered about twelve
o'clock by the watchman, and he mentioned the circum-
stance to the constable of the night. The constable applied
to one of the overseers of the parish, by whose direction
the parts of the body were collected and taken to the watch-
house. On the following day the matter was communicated
to Mr Umfreville, the coroner, who examined the pieces
found by the watchman ; but he supposed them to be parts
of a corpse taken from a churchyard for the use of some
surgeon, and declined to summon a jury.
   Four years elapsed before the discovery of these horrid
murders, which at length happened in the following manner.
Continual disagreements prevailed between the mother and
daughter; and, though the latter had now arrived at the
age of maturity, she was often beaten, and otherwise treated
with severity. Thus provoked, she sometimes threatened
to destroy herself, and at others to give information against
her mother as a murderer.
   At last information concerning the affair was given to
the overseers of Tottenham parish, and mother and daughter
were committed to the Gatehouse. At the ensuing Old
Bailey sessions they were both sentenced to be executed on
the following Monday, and then to be conveyed to Surgeons'
Hall for dissection.
   The mother, being in a fit when she was put into the cart,
lay at her length till she came to the place of execution,
when she was raised up, and means were used for her
recovery, but without effect, so that she departed this life
in a state of insensibility. From the time of leaving Newgate
to the moment of her death the daughter wept incessantly.

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After hanging the usual time the bodies were conveyed in
a hearse to Surgeons' Hall, where they were exposed to the
curiosity of the public, and then dissected.

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