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The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

GEORGE WEBB

Son of a Clergyman, and a Notorious Burglar. Executed 
on Shooter's Hill, near London, 1809

GEORGE WEBB was born near Bromsgrove, in
Worcestershire, and, though the son of a clergyman,
became a most notorious depredator. He went to London,
and there got acquainted with Richard Russel, John Leonard
White and Edward Egerton, men of infamous character.
He then went to Woolwich and worked as a lumper, and
there married a young woman of the name of Cocks, and
commenced as smuggler. About Deptford he was known by
the name of Smith. He was committed for an assault, and
tried at the Quarter Sessions at Maidstone, where he received
sentence of imprisonment, to pay a fine of five pounds, and
to find bondsmen for his good behaviour. He lay there six
months after his sentence had expired for want of sureties,
and then volunteered his services to the justices to serve in
the West Kent Militia. His services were accepted, and he
was sworn in at Tonbridge.
   He joined the regiment, remained with it five or six
months, and then deserted. He was taken up and brought
back to Maidstone as a deserter, and was discharged by
order of the Secretary of War, taken to the regiment, and
punished.
   Soon after this he again deserted, and took an apartment
on Blackheath, in the neighbourhood of which, many depre-
dations having been committed, he was apprehended and
taken to Bow Street, with Richard Russel and Sarah Russel,
on suspicion of feloniously and burglariously breaking into
and entering the dwelling-house of Thomas EbenezerTaylor,
situated at New Cross, and stealing a pair of pistols, an
opera-glass and divers other articles.
   They also stood charged with breaking into and entering
the dwelling-house of William Shadbolt, in the parish of
Deptford, and stealing divers articles of plate, several silver
coins, seven shirts, etc. Also with breaking into and entering

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the dwelling-house of Joseph Warner, in the parish of Eltham,
and stealing six window-curtains and divers other articles.
When taken into custody it was discovered Webb had been
at Birmingham. He had sent his mother a letter, a copy of
which is as follows :--

   MY DEAR MOTHER,--Ingratitude, mingled with shame,
almost dares me to either write or see you again : how-
ever, I have this assurance and full determination of seeing
you, please God, and with your approbation, on Wednesday
next, at the Hen and Chickens, New Street, Birmingham,
with my sister or sisters. It is my intention, please the
Almighty nothing happens, to be there on the before-
mentioned day, and I hope you will give me the meeting
there, if possible you can make it convenient. Do not let
the expense be a hindrance, as that's of no consequence. I
will defray the whole. So you will, I hope, excuse this short
epistle, and forward an answer by return of post, to oblige
your ungrateful son,
                                                              GEORGE WEBB.

   BLACKHEATH.

   P.S.-Direct for Mr Webb, near the Hare and Billet,
Blackheath, Kent.

   The magistrates at Bow Street now thought it advisable
to dispatch William Adkins, an officer, to Bordesley, near
Birmingham, the residence of his mother, who, on his arrival
there, searched her house for silver tablespoons and other
goods stolen from the house of General Twiss, of Southend,
near Eltham, in Kent. Mr Payn and Mr Eagle, constables,
assisted him in the search. When he entered Mrs Webb's
house he found therein Mrs Webb and her two daughters,
Mrs Knot, a lodger, and the servant-girl. He asked Mrs
Webb if she had a son who lived in Blackheath. She said
she believed she had. He then asked her if he had not been
down to see her lately. She said he had. He then asked
her if he had not brought a box or trunk with plated
goods in it. She replied he had brought a box, but there
was nothing but clothes in it; and what he had brought he

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had taken away with him. He then told Mrs Webb he was
an officer from Bow Street; that he and Mr Payn and Mr
Eagle had a warrant to search the house; that her son was
in custody on a very serious charge, and if he had left any-
thing with her, or if there was anything in her house which
he had brought down with him, he begged her to mention
them, as otherwise, if anything were found, it might be of
serious consequence to her; for, as to him (her son), no
evidence was wanting to convict him. Mrs Webb said
there was nothing left there at all. He again begged of
her, if there was anything, to inform him of it. She hesi-
tated a while, and then said there was a pair of pistols,
which were in a box in the back kitchen. The witness
took possession of them, and also a pair of patent silver
clasps or latchets, and wrote his initials on them. He then
asked her if there was anything more, and she positively
said there was not. Miss Ann Webb came up to him in
the passage, and he asked her if there was anything more,
and she said there was ; that she had a purse and a smelling-
bottle in her pocket; and she immediately gave him a
silver-net purse, a smelling-bottle and an opera-glass. He
then asked her if there was not something else; and she
said yes there was: her sister had a purse also and a
pocket-book. He then went to Mrs M'Gaa, and she ac-
knowledged to have received from her brother a purse and
a pocket-book, and went upstairs and fetched a silver-net
purse, a pocket-book, a pencil and pencil-case, and gave
them to the officer. He then asked Miss Ann Webb if
there were not some plated goods. She replied: " Why,
has not my mother told you? " He said: " Yes, but not
where they are." Mrs M'Gaa then took him to a shed in
the garden and showed him where they were; and out of
a rabbit-pen in that shed he took four plated stands and
two silver saltspoons, which were covered with hay in the
pen. He then asked her if there was anything else. She
said: "Has my mother mentioned a table-cloth? " Adkins
said: No." Mrs M'Gaa then took him upstairs and
showed him a drawer, out of which he took a large damask

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table-cloth. He then said he must search them; and on
that Mrs Webb pulled out of her pocket a shagreen mathe-
matical instrument case and instruments, which she said she
had forgotten, and a pocket-book of yellow leather, mounted
with silver, which she gave to him. Mrs M'Gaa afterwards
gave him another pair of silver saltspoons. All these goods
Mrs Webb said her son had given to them. He also took
from Miss Ann Webb seven pieces of old silver coin and
one piece of gold coin ; also a silver cross set with garnets,
and an enamelled trinket mounted with brass. He likewise
found in the cupboard in the parlour a silver pepper-box.
   The next morning he found in a drawer, in the front
chamber, a red morocco writing-case, which Mrs Webb
and her daughters said they had no knowledge of. The
widow, on examination, afterwards confessed that her son,
George Webb, about twenty-eight years old, came to see
her that day fortnight, in order to sign a conveyance of his
interest in an estate to her, which she had contracted to sell
to Sir Harry Featherstone Haugh; that he told her he
resided at Blackheath, had married a wife with a fortune
of nine hundred and fifty pounds, was in the wholesale tea
trade, and doing very well ; that he should have it in his
power to assist her if she wanted it, and to allow her fifty
pounds a year; that he brought his clothes in a box; and
when he first came into the house he told her he had brought
her a small present, and went upstairs with his box, and
brought down two pairs of plated bottle-stands and two pairs
of silver saltspoons, and a silver-net purse and a table-cloth,
which he gave to her ; that soon after he gave to his sister,
Mrs M'Gaa, a silver-net purse and a silver pencil-case and
penknife; and to his sister Ann he gave a smelling-bottle,
a yellow leather purse mounted with silver, and an opera-
glass. That as soon as his brother Robert came home from
work he gave him, in her presence, a pair of brass pistols,
which he said he had designed for his brother Charles;
that he also gave Robert a pair of patent silver latchets,
and a mathematical instrument case, as he thought Robert
was in a way of trade in which they might be of service

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to him; that he said he had given five guineas for the
pistols and two pounds, ten shillings for the mathematical
instrument case; that she (the mother) was proud of
these articles as a present from her son, and showed them
to Mr Allen and Mr Dickenson, and many other neigh-
bours ; that in return she gave her son George, before he
left Birmingham, a silver watch of his father's, a gold seal
and a silver cup. She, however, confessed that, a little before
the officers came and searched her house, she had received a
letter by the London post, without a signature, and ill spelt,
dated 1st of July, 1809, desiring her to put everything out
of the house. Fearing from this that her son had done some-
thing wrong, she was distressed to the utmost, and put the
two pairs of bottle-stands and pair of saltspoons in the rabbit-
pen; and that from the same fears, and under the same
alarm, she was induced to give the false account she did
to Mr Adkins respecting the things her son George had
brought to her house.
   The stolen property being thus ascertained, the suspected
housebreakers-viz. Webb, Russel, White, Egerton and
Sarah Russel, Russel's wife, aged thirty-five-were removed
from London to Maidstone, and there tried for the same.
Webb and Russel were found guilty, and White, Egerton
and Russel's wife were acquitted.
   When sentence of death was pronounced, Webb did not
appear the least affected.

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