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The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume IV

WILLIAM WYNNE RYLAND

Engraver to his Majesty. Executed at Tyburn, in August,
1783, for forging a Bill of Exchange

WILLIAM WYNNE RYLAND was an engraver of
great ability, and received a pension from both the
King and Queen, who held him in high estimation as an
artist. Fortune had smiled upon Mr Ryland, even from his
birth, until his evil genius prompted him, for gold, to debase
his talents in engraving for the purpose of committing
forgery.
   He was a native of Wales. His father had been patronised
by the late Sir Watkin Williams Wynne, who jocosely said
that if ever Mr Ryland should marry he would be the
godfather of his first son. This soon after happened, and
the unfortunate subject of this history, being the first-born
of such marriage, was named William Wynne, by desire of
the worthy baronet.
   Ryland gave early proof of his genius, for while in the
former part of his apprenticeship he engraved a head of his
godfather, Sir Watkin Williams Wynne, which was esteemed
a production of singular merit for so young an artist.
   Having faithfully served his time, he visited the French
and Italian schools, and obtained the honorary medal in Paris.
On his return to England he introduced the admired art of
engraving copper-plates to yield an impression resembling
drawing in chalk ; and soon after his Majesty ascended the
throne he appointed Mr Ryland his engraver, with a salary
of two hundred pounds a year, and the Queen added one
hundred pounds a year more, out of her privy purse, as a
testimony of her approbation of his extraordinary talents.

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   Mr Ryland entered into partnership with a Mr Bryer,
and they jointly opened a shop in Cornhill, where they
carried on a very extensive trade in prints, the former stil1
continuing to exercise his abilities in the art of engraving.
Though their business was productive of great profit, several
capital losses occurred almost at the same time, and their
pecuniary affairs became so deranged that a bankruptcy
ensued.
   Some years after this failure Mr Ryland, on his own
separate account, opened a print-shop in the Strand, where
he had every prospect of success; but being fond of a private
life, where he might have leisure to " pursue coy Science in
her last retreat," he declined public business and retired to
Pimlico, thence to Knightsbridge, where, by one fatal act,
he entirely ruined his reputation as a man: but his name as
an artist will ever stand in the highest estimation.
   At this time Mr Ryland had recovered his losses in trade,
and had been bequeathed shares in the Liverpool Waterworks
which were then deemed to be worth ten thousand pounds.
His business was worth two thousand pounds a year, and his
stock was valued at ten thousand pounds more. Such was
his own statement of his property in his defence on his trial ;
and it was supposed that, in order to engross the remaining
shares in his Liverpool concern, he committed the forgery
for which he suffered.
   He had already obtained several sums on forgeries, Mr
Nightingale, the banker, having advanced him, on the 19th
of September, 1782, three thousand pounds; and such was
his opinion of Mr Ryland that he declared he would have
lent him that sum without any deposit whatever.
   The forged instruments so exactly resembled the real
bills that it was scarcely possible to know one from the
other. But at length it was discovered that two bills of the
same tenor and date were out, consequently one of them
must be a forgery.
   Suspicion now fell so strongly on Ryland that he was
induced to secret himself; and a reward was offered for his
apprehension. He went in disguise to Stepney, and there

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took an obscure lodging at the hovel of one Richard Free-
man, a cobbler, accompanied by Mrs Ryland, the wretched
partner of his misfortune, passing as Mr and Mrs Jackson.
   There he some time evaded the search after him, till one
fatal step of the unfortunate woman, who was watching over
his safety, caused his apprehension. She brought, unconscious
of danger, one of her husband's shoes to the cobbler to be
mended, with the name of " Ryland " on the inside of it.
This was fatal : the cobbler, in order to obtain the reward,
delivered up his lodger.
   When the officers of justice went to apprehend Ryland
they found him in a corner of the room on his knees, and
heard a noise like a guggling. in his throat, which was
occasioned by his having cut it. He had a razor in his
hand, and a basin stood before him; but the wound did
not prove mortal.
  On the 26th of July, 1783, he was arraigned at the bar
of the Old Bailey, on an indictment charging him with
" forging, and uttering, knowing it to be forged, a certain
bill of exchange for two hundred and ten pounds sterling,
purporting it to be a bill drawn by the gentlemen of the
factory, at Fort Saint George, in Madras, on the Honourable
East India Company, with intent to defraud the said Com-
pany, and divers other persons, to whom he had passed the
said bill."
   He was found guilty, and, his crime admitting of no
mercy, was executed at Tyburn in August, 1783.

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