The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

WILLIAM TOWNLEY

Convicted of Burglary, and executed at Gloucester,
23rd of March, 1811, a Few Minutes
before a Reprieve arrived

WILLIAM TOWNLEY had received sentence of
death at Gloucester, for burglary, and was left for
execution. A short time after the departure of the judge
towards Hereford, the next assize town, he was informed
of some circumstances favourable to the case of the prisoner,
and, in consequence thereof, he granted a reprieve. By a fatal
mistake this reprieve was directed by the clerk to Mr Wilton,
under-sheriff of Herefordshire, in place of Gloucestershire,
and put into the post office at Hereford. There it remained
until the letters were delivered next morning, time enough
for it to have reached Gloucester. When Messrs Bird and
Woolaston, the under-sheriffs for Herefordshire, opened the
packet, seeing its import of life or death, they dispatched Mr
Bennet of the hotel with it, upon a fleet horse, to the place
of its destination, thirty-four miles away ; but, melancholy
to relate, he arrived at the spot of execution twenty minutes
too late; the culprit having been hanging on the gallows
that time, and dead.

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