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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

CHARLES PRICE

A Notorious Swindler and Bank-Note Forger, 
who committed Suicide in 1786

THIS extraordinary impostor, whose artifices enabled him
to commit unprecedented depredations on the public,
was born about the year 1730, in London. His father
lived in Monmouth Street, and carried on the trade of a
salesman in old clothes. Tired of the tricks and knaveries
of his son Charles, the father placed him with a hosier in
St James's Street. There he continued for a short time. He
robbed his father of an elegant suit of clothes, in which he
dressed himself, went to his master in this disguise, purchased
about ten pounds' worth of silk stockings, left his address,
"Benjamin Bolingbroke, Esq., Hanover Square," and ordered
them to be sent to him in an hour's time, when he would
pay the person who brought them. His master did not
know him; so, to complete the cheat, our hero came back
in half-an-hour in his usual dress, and was ordered to take
the goods home, which he actually pretended to do. Thus

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were both master and father robbed. He was, however,
soon after found out, and discharged.
   As his wits were never long unemployed for some decep-
tive ends, he issued the following curious advertisement in
the year 1775 :--

WANTED

   " A partner of character, probity, and extensive acquaint-
ance; upon a plan permanent and productive, fifty per
cent., without risk, may be obtained. It is not necessary
he should have any knowledge of the business, which the
advertiser possesses in its fullest extent ; but he must possess
a capital of between five hundred and a thousand pounds,
to purchase materials, with which, to the knowledge of the
advertiser, a large fortune must be made in a very short time.
   " Address to P. C., Cardigan Head, Charing Cross.

   " P.S.-None but principals, and those of liberal ideas,
will be treated with."

   To this advertisement the famous comedian, Samuel
Foote, paid attention. Eager to seize what he thought a
golden opportunity, he advanced the sum of five hundred
pounds for a brewery. The sum soon disappeared, and
Foote was wrung with the anguish of disappointment.
Price, however, had the impudence to apply to him again,
wishing him to unite in the baking trade; the comedian
archly replied: " As you have brewed, so you may bake
but I'll be cursed if ever you bake as you have brewed ! "
   After this unfortunate business Mr Price turned Methodist
preacher, and in this character he defrauded several persons
of large sums of money. Advertising in order to get gentle-
men wives, lie swindled a person of the name of Wigmore
of fifty guineas, for which he was indicted; but, having
refunded a part, he effected his escape. These and other
fraudulent practices were long the objects of his ambition,
though they were all the certain roads to infamy.
   We now arrive at that period of his life when he com-
menced his ravages upon the Bank of England, which ended

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in his destruction. In the year 1780 (under the assumed
name of Brank) Mr Price engaged a servant, a plain, simple,
honest fellow, by means of whom he passed his notes with-
out detection. The young fellow observed an advertisement
respecting a situation which seemed likely to suit him, so
he answered it, but heard nothing of the advertiser for a
whole week. One evening, however, just as it was dusk,
a coachman inquired for the man who had answered the
advertisement, saying there was a gentleman over the way,
in a coach, who wanted to speak with him. On this the
young fellow was called, and went to the coach, where he
was desired to step in. There he saw an apparently old man,
affecting the foreigner, seemingly very gouty, wrapped up
with five or six yards of flannel about his legs, a camlet
surtout buttoned over his chin, close to his mouth, a large
patch over his left eye, and every part of his face so hidden
that the young fellow could not see any part of it except his
nose, his right eye and a small part of that cheek. To carry
on the deception still better, Mr Price thought proper to
place the man on his left side, on which the patch was,
so that he could look askance at the young man with his
right eye, and by that means discover only a small portion
of his face. He appeared by his disguise to be between
sixty and seventy years of age; and afterwards, when the
man saw him standing, not much under six feet in height,
owing to shoes or boots with heels very little less than
three inches high. Added to this deception, he was so
buttoned up and straitened that he appeared perfectly lank.
He was in reality about five feet, six inches high, a compact,
neat man, square-shouldered, inclined to corpulency. His
legs were firm and well set; but by nature his features made
him look much older than he really was, which, at that time,
was nearly fifty. His nose was aquiline, and his eyes small
and grey; his mouth stood very much inwards, with very
thin lips; his chin pointed and prominent, with a pale
complexion. But what contributed as much as anything to
favour his disguise of speech was his loss of teeth. He
walked exceedingly upright, was very active and quick in

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his walk, and was something above what we describe a man
to be when we call him a dapper-made man.
   This simple and honest fellow Samuel, whom Mr Price
had engaged, was employed by him to negotiate his forged
bills, principally in the purchase of lottery tickets, at the
same time never fully disclosing to him his name, person
or history. Indeed the plan was devised and executed with
uncommon ability. However, Samuel was at last detected,
having passed bills to the amount of fourteen hundred
pounds. But his principal eluded discovery, and retired
with his booty into the deepest shades of obscurity. The
poor servant was imprisoned for nearly a twelvemonth,
terrified out of his wits at being the innocent instrument
of such complicated villainy.
   Mr Price, having most probably exhausted his former
acquisitions, sallied forth in the year 1782, after new game,
with the most unparalleled audacity. For this purpose he
obtained his second servant from a registry office, a smart
active boy of the name of Power: his father was a Scots
Presbyterian, and to ingratiate himself with him Mr Price
made great pretensions to religion, expressing a hope that
his son was well acquainted with the Lord's Prayer and the
Ten Commandments. Our hero began his ravages upon a
Mr Spilsbury, of Soho Square, ordering great quantities of
his drops. Wilmot was his assumed name, and he introduced
himself to Spilsbury as possessing all the symptoms of age
and infirmity. He was wrapped up in a large camlet great-
coat; he had a slouch hat on, the brim of which was large,
and bent downwards on each side of his head; a piece of
red flannel covered his chin and came up on each side of his
face, almost as high as the cheek-bones ; he had a large bush
wig on, and his legs were wrapped over with flannel. He had
also a pair of green spectacles on his nose, with a green silk
shade hanging down from his hat, but no patch on his eye.
It is remarkable that Mr Spilsbury knew Mr Price but not
Mr Wilmot; nay, so complete was the deception that,
sitting together in a coffee-house, Mr Spilsbury complained
to his coffee-house acquaintance of the notes which Wilmot

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had imposed upon him. Price kept crying out now and
then, " Lackaday ! Good God ! Who could suppose such
knavery to exist! What, and did the bank refuse payment,
sir? " staring through his spectacles with as much seeming
surprise as an honest man would have done.
   Price had often been at the shop of a grocer, Mr Roberts,
in Oxford Street. Here he now and then bought a few
articles, and took many opportunities of showing his
importance. One day he called there in a hackney-coach,
disguised as an old man, and bought a few things. A day
or two afterwards he repeated his visit; and on a third day,
when he knew Mr Roberts was from home, he went again,
with his face so painted that he seemed diseased with the
yellow jaundice. The shopman, to whom he enumerated
his complaints, gave him a prescription for that disorder,
one that had cured his father of it. Price gladly accepted
the recipe, promising that if it succeeded he would very
liberally reward him for his civility. In a few days he called
again, when he appeared perfectly free from the complaint,
and acknowledged his great obligation to the shopman, to
whom, after he had expatiated on his affluent circumstances,
the short time he had to live in the world, and the few
relations he had to leave anything to, he made a present
of a ten-pound bank-note. The reader need not be told it
was a counterfeit one. At the same time he said that he
wanted cash for another, which was a fifty-pound note, and
the obliging shopman got change for it from an opposite
neighbour. The next day, in Mr Roberts's absence, he called
again, and entreated the lad to get other five fifty-pound notes
changed for small ones; and when he told him his master
was not in the way Price begged he would take them to his
master's banker, and there get them changed. This request
the servant complied with. The bankers, Harley, Burchall
& Co., complied with Mr Roberts's supposed request, and
changed them without suspicion, and small notes were that
day given for them to Mr Price.
   Upon a great many other individuals he practised frauds
equally ingenious and successful. In his last attempt on the

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bank, which ended in his detection, he assumed the name
of Palton, pretended he was an Irish linen-factor, and
employed two young men to circulate his notes, whilst he,
greatly disguised, kept back in obscurity. By means of a
pawnbroker he was found out, with great difficulty. On his
seizure he solemnly declared his innocence, and before the
magistrate behaved with insolence. This detection took
place on the 14th of January, 1786. He was soon sworn
to by more persons than one, and seeing no way of escape
he pretended, to his wife in particular, great penitence ;
but there was no ground for its reality. The bank fully
intended to prosecute him, and there was no doubt of his
dying by the hands of the executioner. He was found, how-
ever, one evening hanging against the post of the door of
his apartments, in Tothill Fields Bridewell.
   The depredations of this villain amounted in the whole
to upwards of one hundred thousand pounds; and yet, after
his apprehension, he wrote a letter to a gentleman whom he
had defrauded of more than two thousand pounds, recom-
mending his wife and eight children to his protection.

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