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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

ELIZABETH KING

Sentenced to Death at the Old Bailey, for privately 
stealing a Bag of Gold, 21st of September, 1811

0N the 21st of September, 1811, Elizabeth King, along
with Elizabeth Blott and Philadelphia Walton, were put
to the bar, charged with a robbery in a dwelling-house.
   Mr Barry, for the prosecution, stated the following
case to the jury. The prosecutor, Mr William Coombe,
a publican, lived at the King's Head public-house, Earl
Street, Blackfriars. On Saturday, the 8th of June, about
eight o'clock in the evening, the three prisoners came to his
house, and going into a back parlour ordered some ale, which
they drank. Then one of them, Elizabeth Blott, begged
to sit in the bar, as she waited to see Mr Lloyd, whom she
expected. Mr Coombe accordingly permitted her, and the
three prisoners went into the bar together. In a short time
Blott and Walton went to look for Mr Lloyd, leaving the
prisoner King in the bar, from which Mr Coombe was
frequently called, so that she was several times alone there.
When the other two, with Mr Lloyd, returned, they all sat
down a short time together, and then all departed.
   At twelve o'clock at night, when Mr Coombe was going
to bed, he discovered that a canvas bag, containing a silk
bag and thirty-six guineas in gold, which was in his coat-
pocket that hung across the back of a chair in his bar, had
been carried off. Dickons, an officer of Bow Street, received
information of the robbery, and . through the exertions
of Mr Reading, a publican, in the neighbourhood of
Gray's Inn Lane, and Elizabeth Blott, one of the prisoners,
the prisoner Elizabeth King was apprehended, when she
immediately confessed that she only had committed the
robbery. She stated that she had exchanged the guineas
for bank-notes, that she spent six of them, and that she had

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deposited the notes, etc., in the hands of Mr Slyford, a
publican in Brooke's Market.
   The counsel for the prosecution stated that the bank-notes
and three guineas, as mentioned, were delivered up by
Mr Slyford; and he added that, in justice and humanity,
the prisoners Walton and Blott should not have been
included in the indictment, and if he had been consulted
before the bill had been preferred he would not have
permitted them to have been put upon their trial.
   The facts, as stated, were proved, and Elizabeth King
was found guilty and sentenced to death.

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