The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

JOHN PIERCE, VINCENT PIERCE AND
ELIZABETH LUKER

Sentenced to Imprisonment for a Riot at Sadler's Wells
Theatre which occasioned the Death of Eighteen of
the Audience

THE true cause of this very shocking circumstance,
so fatal in its consequences, is known to but few. If
it had been occasioned wilfully, for the sake of plunder, the
very worst of deaths should have overtaken the offenders.

[77]

As it was, the injured proprietors of the theatre, who alone
were entitled to prosecute, could only reach the promoters
in a conviction of a riot -- unattended with proof which
would lead to capital punishment.
   It appeared that a noisy, intoxicated party, among whom
were those convicted, sat in the pit, and were observed
during the evening to disturb the audience. At length
they so greatly annoyed the peaceable part near them that
a quarrel arose, and the woman, Elizabeth Luker, cried
out to her debauched male associates : " Fight ! Fight ! "
This was, unhappily, by distant parts of the house, supposed
to be the cry of " Fire ! Fire ! " So dread an alarm in such
a place -- hundreds crowded together -- will readily be con-
ceived. Each seeking safety in flight, the avenues of the
theatre were soon choked up, and the weakest trampled
underfoot.
   In vain did the performers from the stage call upon
them to return ; in vain did they assure them that there
could be no danger of fire in a theatre filled with water
-- even a speaking-trumpet, proclaiming to that effect, was
not heard.
   Eighteen unhappy mortals thus perished. They were
mostly females and boys. The men thus numbered with
the dead were small, and apparently of weak habits of
body.
   From the turbulent part, the three above named, who
were, however unintentionally, the cause of this havoc,
were identified, seized, tried, and convicted of a riot.
   Mr Mainwaring, the chairman at the Quarter Sessions
at Hicks's Hall, where they were tried, addressed them
in a very impressive and solemn manner, to the following
effect :-
   " John Pierce, Vincent Pierce and Elizabeth Luker,
you have been severally convicted on an indictment which
charged you with being riotously and tumultuously assembled
for the purpose of disturbing the King's peace, and of having
resisted the legal authority to suppress your dangerous con-
duct in a theatre legally authorised, called Sadler's Wells.

[78]

   "It has appeared that you obtained admission into that
theatre; and it has also appeared from the evidence that
you repeatedly interrupted the performance, grossly insulted
the audience, and obstructed the officers, duly, authorised,
in the performance and execution of their duty, when inter-
posing to prevent your rioting. It is necessary, to preserve
the public peace, that propriety of demeanour should be ob-
served, from the highest to the lowest, in persons assembled
at places of public amusement. The mischievous and fatal
effects which have ensued for want of a due observance
of the principles of decorum are too numerous to make it
necessary for me to recount, and it is to be lamented that
hardly a week passes but those disturbances do arise in
one or other of the theatres. But the calamitous and
dreadful events which happened in consequence of your
outrageous conduct are distressing in the extreme. Not
less than eighteen lives were lost ! Whole families were
plunged into irremediable ruin by the loss of the protection
of those who were their natural protectors and guardians.
When informed of the mischief you had occasioned, instead
of exhibiting horror and dismay, and showing symptoms
of sorrow and compunction, you most unfeelingly replied :
' Well, we don't care; we can't be hanged for it ! ' But
surely, if you are not worse than brutes or savages, and void
of the feelings which in general govern human nature, you
will hereafter feel compunctions of remorse for the misery
you have entailed upon the relatives of the deceased. The
sentence which the Court is about to pronounce is slight
in comparison with your crimes, and affords no atonement
for your offence, but it is to be hoped that the punishment
will have the effect of calling you to a proper repentance
and contrition, and induce you to conduct yourselves,
for the future, at all times, and in all places, with decency.
Eighteen of your fellow-creatures by your improper conduct
have been deprived of their lives. Wives of their husbands.
Fathers of their children. And children of their parents.
And whole families brought to utter ruin by your outrageous
conduct. The sentence, therefore, of the Court upon you,

[79]

John Pierce, is, that you be imprisoned for the space of six
months; and that you, Vincent Pierce, be imprisoned for
the space of four months ; and that you, Elizabeth Luker,
be imprisoned only for the space of fourteen days."

[80]


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