The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

JANE COX

Executed at Exeter Summer Assizes, 1811, for 
poisoning a Child with Arsenic

JANE COX was indicted at Exeter Assizes, on the 9th
of August, 1811, for the wilful murder of one John
Trenaman, an infant, sixteen months old, and Arthur Tucker
was charged as an accessory. The latter was a respectable

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farmer, living at Hatherleigh, in this county, and the
infant was his natural child. It appeared that Jane Cox
had, an the 25th of June, 1811, administered to the child
a quantity of arsenic, by putting it into the child's hands.
The child put the arsenic in its mouth, in consequence of
which it died in about two hours. The prisoner, in her
written confession, had implicated Tucker, as having per-
suaded her to do the deed, and stated his having taken the
arsenic from under the roof of a cottage, and given it to
her, and promised her a one-pound note if she would
adminster it to the child . This was not believed.
   The prisoner, Jane Cox, after a trial of seven hours, was
convicted, and hanged on the following Monday. Tucker
was acquitted. He called a number of respectable witnesses
who gave him a very high character.
   On Monday, the 12th of August, 1811, pursuant to
her sentence, this unfortunate woman was brought to the
" new drop," the place of execution, and underwent the
dread sentence of the law.
   She addressed the spectators at some length, and lamented
that the person who had instigated her to the commission
of the horrid deed was not also to suffer with her.

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