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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

JOHN AMY BIRD BELL

A Fourteen-year-old Criminal, who murdered another
Boy for the sake of Nine Shillings, and was executed
on 1st August, 1831

THIS malefactor, at the time of his execution, was
only fourteen years of age. He was indicted at the
Maidstone Assizes on Friday, the 29th of July, 1831, for
the wilful murder of Richard F. Taylor, a boy aged only
thirteen years, in a wood in the parish of Chatham.
   From the evidence it appeared that Taylor was the son
of a poor man, a tallow-chandler, who lived at Stroud. On
Friday, the 4th of March, the little fellow, who was described
as having been possessed of peculiar intelligence and an
amiable disposition, was dispatched to Aylesford to receive a
sum of nine shillings, the amount of a weekly parish allow-
ance to his father. He was dressed at the time in a " south-
wester," with a belcher handkerchief round his neck, blue
jacket and waistcoat, brown trousers, and shoes and stock-
ings ; and his father, at his request, lent him a knife, with
which he expressed his intention to cut a bow and arrow on
his way home. The boy arrived safely at Aylesford, when
Mr Cutbath, the relieving officer of the parish, gave him the
usual amount of nine shillings. The boy had previously
been instructed by his father as to the mode of carrying the
money, and the little fellow had shown him how completely
and how securely he could conceal it, by putting it into a
little bag, which he could carry in the palm of his hand
inside a mitten which he wore; and on this occasion he was
observed to place the silver in the customary manner in his
hand. He usually reached home at about three o'clock,
but this afternoon he did not return. As night advanced

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his father became alarmed at his absence; and the next
morning he determined to go himself to Aylesford, for the
purpose of making inquiries for him. The fact of his
having received the money was ascertained; but all search
for him proved unavailing, and his parents were left in a
most painful state of doubt as to the cause of his sudden
disappearance.
   It was not until the 11th of May that the real facts of the
murder of the unhappy boy were discovered. On that day a
man named Izzard was passing through a bypath in a wood
situated at a distance of about two miles from Rochester,
and about thirty rods from the highroad, when he found the
body of the boy lying in a ditch. The mitten was cut from
his left hand, and his clothes were disarranged, as if there
had been a scuffle. Although the body was so much decom-
osed as to prevent his being able to discover by what means
death had been produced, the remains of blood upon the
shirt, coat and neckerchief left no doubt of the dreadful
death which the boy had suffered. He had died of a wound
which had been inflicted in his throat with a sharp-pointed
instrument, the mark of which was still visible, and which
could not have been inflicted by the deceased himself.
   A diligent search was immediately instituted, for the
purpose of endeavouring to find the instrument with which
this terrible murder had been committed, and in a short time
a common white horn-handled knife was found, corroded
with rust, which had every appearance of being the weapon
that had been used by the murderer. The discovery of this
weapon afforded some clue to the parties implicated in the
transaction, and a man named Bell, and his two sons, John
Amy Bird Bell and James Bell, respectively of the ages of
fourteen and eleven years, were taken into custody. These
persons lived in the poorhouse adjoining the spot where
the murder was committed; and the information obtained
by the constable, by which the knife which had been found
was discovered to have belonged to the boy John Bell,
afforded conclusive testimony of one at least of them having
been concerned in the foul deed.

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   An investigation into the circumstances of the murder
took place before the magistrates at Rochester, the result
of which was that convincing proof was obtained of the
implication of the two boys. During this inquiry it became
necessary that the body of the deceased should be exhumed
--it had been buried immediately after it had been dis-
covered and the coroner's jury had sat -- in order that the
person of the boy might be searched -- an operation which
had been previously most unaccountably omitted. When
this examination was made, the two younger prisoners were
taken to the graveyard for the purpose of observing the
effect of the proceeding upon them. The elder boy, John,
maintained throughout a sullen silence; but his brother
James, on being desired to enter the grave and search the
pockets of the clothes of the deceased, which had been
buried on his person, cheerfully complied, and brought
forth the knife which the father of the unhappy lad had lent
him on his setting out for Aylesford. This was the only
article found upon him, and robbery, therefore, it was at
once seen, had been the object of his murderer.
   The prisoners after this underwent another examination
before the magistrates ; and upon their being again remanded,
the younger boy confessed that he and his brother had com-
mitted the murder -- that his brother had waylaid the
deceased in the wood, while he had remained at its outskirts
to keep watch. Upon this the evidence of the younger
boy was accepted. The father having been discharged from
custody, although strong suspicion had been felt of his
having been an accessory after the commission of the crime
the prisoner, John Amy Bird Bell, was committed for trial
The statement of the younger boy exhibited a remarkable
degree of depravity in the conduct of his brother and himself.
He said that they had long contemplated the murder of
their wretched victim, as they had learned from him the
errand upon which he so frequently travelled from Stroud
to Aylesford and back ; but various circumstances had pre-
vented the completion of their design until the 4th of March,
when it was carried out by John, who afterwards gave him

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one shilling and sixpence as his share of the proceeds of the
transaction.
   On the way to Maidstone the prisoner acknowledged the
truth of his brother's statement, and pointed out a pond
where he had washed the blood of his victim off his hands
on his way home after the murder. He also pointed to the
opening which led to the spot where the murder was com-
mitted, and said to the officer: " That's where I killed the
poor boy." Then he added: " He is better off than I am
now: do not you think he is, sir? "-an observation to which
the constable assented.
   At the trial the prisoner exhibited the utmost indifference
to his fate, and appeared to entertain no fear for the con-
sequences of his guilt. He maintained his firmness through-
out a most feeling address of the learned judge, in which
he was sentenced to death, but exhibited some emotion
when he was informed that a part of the sentence was
that his body should be given over to the surgeons to be
dissected.
   At half-past eleven o'clock on Monday morning the
wretched malefactor ceased to exist, and his body was given
to the surgeons of Rochester for dissection.

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