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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

JOHN PLACKETT

Executed on the Ciiy Road, London, 28th of July, 1762,
for robbing a Danish Gentleman, whom he
treated with great Barbarity

ALL the robberies which we have been able to trace to
this man were committed within the circle of a mile
of Islington, the place of his birth.. He was transported for
a burglary near Clerkenwell, which adjoins to Islington --
which is in fact a part of that village -- and he was executed
near the spot where he robbed and so cruelly treated a
stranger.
   John Plackett was the son of industrious people, living at
Islington, who placed him at a charity school, whence he was
apprenticed to Mr Pullen, wheelwright, of St John's Street.
   He absconded from his master before four years of his
apprenticeship were expired, and entered on board a man-
of-war. His character as a sailor was unexceptionable; but
when the ship was paid off  he contracted an acquaintance
with a number of dissolute people, and, having soon spent
his wages in scenes of riot and dissipation, he commenced
as a footpad.
   Having subsisted some time by the commission of
robberies on the highway, he broke into a house near
Hockley-in-the-Hole and stole a quantity of kitchen fur-
niture, for which offence he was tried at the Old Bailey,
and sentenced to seven years' transportation. Soon after
the expiration of the term of his exile Plackett returned to
England, and committed several robberies between Islington
and London.
   On the 10th of June Plackett was drinking with some

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sailors during the greater part of the day, at a public-house
in Wapping, and about twelve at night he left them, with
an intention of committing robbery.
   The same night Mr Fayne, a Norway merchant, was
returning from the Danish coffee-house, in Wellclose
Square, where he had spent the evening with some friends,
to his lodgings in Shadwell, when, losing his way, he
inquired of a hackney-coachman the road to Shadwell ;
but, as he spoke very indifferent English, the man could
not understand him, and he presently applied for the same
purpose to another hackney-coachman ; at which instant
Plackett came up and made signs for Mr Fayne to follow
him, saying he was going to Limehouse.
   They walked together through many streets, and obscure
lanes and passages, till they came into the fields, when
Mr Fayne observed that they could not be in the right
road; but the other pretended not to understand him.
They proceeded to the fields near Islington, when Mr
Fayne became greatly alarmed, and expressed much un-
easiness, for which, indeed, he had sufficient cause, for his
treacherous companion, going behind him, struck him a
violent blow on the back of his head, which occasioned him
to fall to the ground.
   The unfortunate gentleman lay for some time in a state
of total insensibility ; but upon recovering the use of his
faculties he found himself entirely naked, and perceived
Plackett standing near him, with his clothes and his pocket-
book in his hands. In a few minutes Plackett made off
with his booty, which, exclusive of his clothes, did not
amount to much more than a guinea and a half. Informa-
tion of the affair was given before Mr Justice Welch, who
advertised a reward for apprehending the offender; and
in a few days Plackett was taken at his lodgings in Gray's
Inn Lane. The shirt that Mr Fayne wore when he was
robbed was found in Plackctt's room; and the person was
traced to whom he had sold the clothes,
   At the next sessions at the Old Bailey, Plackett was
sentenced to be hanged, and his body to be hung it chains.

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The place appointed for his execution was near the
City Road, and when he arrived there he pointed to the
spot where he had robbed Mr Fayne, saying his soul was
struck with horror when he reflected upon his cruelty to
that gentleman. After hanging the usual time the body
was cut down and conveyed to Finchley Common, where it
was put into irons and hung on a gibbet.
   The spot where he suffered was called, for many years
afterwards, " Plackett's Common."

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