The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

JAMES MARLBOROUGH, AND SARAH, HIS WIFE

Imprisoned for Gross Cruelty to their Child,
8th of December, 1809

AT the sessions held at Hicks's Hall, for the county of
Middlesex, on Friday, the 8th of December, 1809,
James Marlborough and Sarah, his wife, were charged
with most inhuman and cruel treatment towards Mary
Marlborough, the infant child of James Marlborough by
a former wife.
   The defendant, James Marlborough, had two children

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by his first wife; Sarah was his second wife. From the
moment of her marriage she practised every species of
barbarity towards both of them, especially towards the little
girl, whose daily and nightly shrieks and piteous cries not
only annoyed but alarmed all the neighbours within hearing.
  On the 9th of October, 1809, the child was heard to weep
most piteously in the front cellar, a place known by the
neighbours to be of the most filthy and hideous description,
and where the defendants kept a pig. About twelve o'clock
at night some forced their way into the house, and insisted
upon seeing both the children. They searched the cellar,
but could not find anything there but gloomy darkness,
dampness and a pig. They then proceeded upstairs, and in
the back parlour found the child lying under the bed, with
both her eyes beaten black, bruised from head to foot, and
almost starved -- a shocking spectacle, showing a degree of
cruelty and inhumanity never before witnessed. On this
the children were taken to the parish officers, and had been
in their hands ever since. The defendants were taken into
custody, and the woman then acknowledged that she had
ill-used the child.
   The little boy told a tale of woe that would have harrowed
the hardest heart. He fully established all the statements
of the counsel for the prosecution. He said that his step-
mother was in the frequent habit of plunging his little sister
into a tub of cold water; that she used to beat her with
sticks, with rods and with a toasting-fork, and that the two
black eyes which she had when found under the bed were
given her on that day by her stepmother with a spoon.
The jury, without a moment's hesitation, found both the
prisoners guilty.
   It turned out in the course of the inquiry that James
Marlborough had beat his wife for her ill-treatment of his
children.
   The Court sentenced the woman to one year's imprison-
ment in the house of correction, Coldbath Fields, and the
man to fourteen days in Newgate -- a mild punishment for
such barbarity.

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