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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

THOMAS SIMMONS

Executed at Hertford, 7th of March, 1808, for a Double
Murder

THOMAS SIMMONS was not more than nineteen
years of age, and of a clownish appearance. His
father was a shoemaker by trade, but followed the plough
some years before his death.
   At an early age Thomas was taken into Mr Boreham's
family, where he lived some years, till, by his brutish be-
haviour in several instances, they were under the necessity
of discharging him; after which he worked at Messrs
Christie & Co., brewers.
   Mr Boreham, a very old gentleman, afflicted by the palsy,

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had been many years a resident at Hoddesdon ; his house
was on the declivity of the hill, beyond that town, about
two hundred yards from the market-house. He had four
daughters : one of them was the wife of Mr Warner, brass-
founder, of the Crescent, Kingsland Road, and also of the
Crescent, Jewin Street. Mrs Warner had been on a visit
to her parents for several days. On Tuesday evening,
20th of October, 1807, Mrs Hummerstone, who super-
intended, as housekeeper, the business of the Black Lion
Inn, at Hoddesdon, for Mr Batty, the proprietor, was also
at Mr Boreham's house, in consequence of an invitation
to spend the evening with the family. The company had
assembled in the parlour, where were Mr Boreham, his
wife, and his four daughters, Anne, Elizabeth, Sarah, and
Mrs Warner. About a quarter past nine this party were
alarmed by a very loud voice at the back of the house. It
proceeded from some person in dispute with the servant-
woman, Elizabeth Harris, and who was insisting to get into
the house. The person proved to be Thomas Simmons, who,
it seems, had, whilst in the family, paid his addresses to the
servant, Elizabeth Harris, who was many years older than
himself; but the symptoms of a ferocious and ungovernable
temper, which he had frequently displayed, had induced his
mistress to dissuade the woman from any connection with
him; and his violent disposition had led also to his dismissal
from this family. He had been heard to vow vengeance
against Elizabeth Harris and the eldest Miss Boreham;
and on Tuesday night he made his way to the farmyard, and
from thence into an interior court, called the stoneyard.
   Elizabeth Harris, on seeing his approach, retired within
the scullery, and shut the door against him. He demanded
admittance, which she refused. High words accordingly
arose, and he plunged his hand, armed with a knife, through
a lattice window at her, but missed his aim. This noise
alarmed the company in the parlour, or keeping-room, as it
was called. Mrs Hummerstone was the first to come forth,
in the hope of being able to intimidate and send away the
disturber ; but just as she reached the back door, leading

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from the parlour to the stoneyard, Simmons, who was pro-
ceeding to enter the house that way, met her, and with his
knife stabbed her in the jugular artery ; he then pulled the
knife forward, and laid open her throat on the left side. She
ran forward, as is supposed, for the purpose of alarming
the neighbourhood, but fell, and rose no more.
   The murderer pursued his sanguinary purpose, and,
rushing into the parlour, raised and brandished his blood-
stained knife, swearing a dreadful oath that he would give
it them all. Mrs Warner was the person next him, and,
without giving her time to rise from her chair, he gave her
so many stabs in the jugular vein, and about her neck and
breast, that she fell from her chair, covered with streams of
blood, and expired. Fortunately Miss Anne Boreham had
been upstairs immediately previous to the commencement
of this horrid business ; and her sisters, Elizabeth and
Sarah, terrified at the horrors they saw, ran upstairs too,
for safety.
   The villain next attacked the aged Mrs Boreham by a
similar aim at her jugular artery, but missed the point, and
wounded her deep in the neck, though not mortally. While
the poor old gentleman was making his way towards the
kitchen, where the servant-maid was, the miscreant, in en-
deavouring to reach the same place, upset him, and then
endeavoured to stab the servant in the throat ; she struggled
with him, caught at the knife, and was wounded severely
in the hand and arm. The knife fell in the struggle. She,
however, got out at the back door and made her way into
the street, where, by her screams of " murder," she alarmed
the neighbourhood. The poor people residing near the
house were all in their beds, but the whole town was soon
alarmed.
   The murderer sought to conceal himself, but after some
search he was discovered in a cow-crib. He was immediately
made prisoner, and brought to the Bell ale-house, where he
was bound and handcuffed until morning, and was actually
on the point of death, from the tightness of his ligatures,
which had nearly stopped the circulation, when Mr Fairfax,

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of the Black Bull Inn, in the town, interfered, cut the
ligatures, and thereby prevented a death too summary for
the cause of public justice.
   The prisoner was committed to Hertford jail, to abide
his trial, which commenced, before Mr Justice Heath, on
Friday, 4th of March.
   As Mr Boreham's family, who were all Quakers, refused
to prosecute on behalf of Mrs Warner, the prisoner was
tried on only one indictment -- viz. for the murder of Mrs
Hummerstone -- at the instance of Mr W. White and Mr
B. Fairfax, of the Bull Inn, Hoddesdon, and Mr J. Brown,
churchwarden of that place.
   Evidence having been given, the jury gave the verdict
of guilty ; and the learned judge pronounced the dreadful
sentence of the law. The sentence seemed to affect the
prisoner very little ; he walked from the bar with great
coolness and indifference, and suffered the punishment
denounced for his crime on the 7th of March, 1808.

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