Ordinary of Newgate Prison:
Ordinary's Accounts: Biographies of Executed Convicts

23rd March 1709

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Currently Held: Harvard University Library

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27th February 1709


The ORDINARY of NEWGATE his Account of the Behaviour, Confession, and Last Speech of George Skelthorp< no role > , that was Executed at Tyburn , on Wednesday the 23d of March, 1708/1709 .

AT the Sessions held at Justice-Hall in the Old-Baily, on Wednesday the 2d , and Thursday the 3d , and then adjourn'd to Thursday the 10th day of March 1708-9 , Seven Persons being found Guilty of Death, received Sentence accordingly. Of these 7, One only is order'd for Execution, and the other Six have obtain'd a gracious Reprieve; which I hope they will take care to improve into further Mercy.

As soon as they were cast for their Lives, I constantly attended them every day: And upon each of the following Solemn Days, viz.

1. Sunday the 6th .

2. Tuesday, the Anniversary of Her Majesty's Accession to the Throne, being the 8th .

3. Ashwednesday the 9th .

4. Sunday the 13th .

5. Sunday the 20th .
of this instant March,

I preach'd to them and others then present, both in the Mornings and Afternoons, upon these several Texts.

1. Upon Job 14. 14. If a man die, shall he live again? All the days of my appointed time will I wait till my change come.

2. Upon Psal. 40.16. Let all those that seek Thee, rejoyce and be glad in Thee: Let such as love Thy Salvation, say continually, The Lord be magnify'd.

3. Upon Isai. 55. 6 & 7. Seek ye the Lord while He may be found: Call ye upon Him while He is near. Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon.

4. Upon Luke 24. 46 & 47. (Part of the 2d Morning-Lesson). And [Jesus] said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the Dead the third Day: And that Repentance and Remission of Sins should be preached in his Name amongst all Nations, beginning at Jerusalem.

5. Upon Prov. 28. 13. He that covers his Sins shall not prosper: But whoso confesses and forsakes them, shall have Mercy.

I shall not here (as I usually do in the like Cases) set down the Heads of those Sermons: That would make this Paper of a larger Extent then I intend it. This only I shall observe, That I concluded every one of those ten Set Discourses with such an Extempore Exhortation and Application, as I thought most suitable to the Condemned; whom I visited and pray'd with in the Chapel twice every day, and had sometimes under private Examination. And then it was that I received from George Skelthorp< no role > his Confession, as hereafter follows.

This George Skelthorp< no role > , the only Person that is now to suffer, was try'd upon two Indictments, and found guilty of both. The first was for assaulting William Hills< no role > , upon the QUEEN's High-way (that is in the Streets from the Strand through the New Buildings to Covent-garden ) and taking from him 4 s. 6 d. on the 18th of February last . The other Indictment was for his assaulting James Booker< no role > on the 27th of the said Month of February , and taking from him a Gold-Ring, a Muslin Neck-Cloth, and 10 s. in Money, in or about the same place, where he had committed the former Robbery. The Account that he gave me, First, of himself; and then of what has a relation to those Facts of which he was accus'd, and for which he was condemn'd, was this: First, As to himself; He said, he was about 25 years of age, born at St. Edmunds Bury , in the County of Suffolk ; That he had been for a time a Domestick Servant in the Families of some Gentlemen, both in the Country and here in Town, and for above these Seven years last past, in the QUEEN's Service , first in Ireland , in the Regiment of Colonel Granfield, in Captain North's Company; and then in Flanders in the same Regiment, and afterwards here in HER MAJESTY's First Regiment of Foot-Guards, in Brigadier Totton's Company: That as he had not had much Education in Matters of Religion, and knew very little of that which is a great Help thereto (viz. Reading) but what he had of himself pickt up of late; so he was easily induced to a Loose Life of Drinking, Whoring, and Breaking the Sabbath-day, and totally neglecting the Service of God. All which heinous and crying Sins were now very grievous to him, and lay very heavy upon his Conscience.

Secondly, As to what concern'd the Facts for which he was to die; he deny'd his being guilty of them, or of any Crime that should have brought him before any Justice; but this only, That he knowing the time when, and the places where some Sodomites were resorting about Covent-Garden , he went to stand in their Way, and when any of them would (as they often did) carry him to a By-place thereabouts to commit their foul Acts with him, he went with them; and then he taking hold of them, threaten'd them, that he would presently bring them before a Justice, unless they gave him Satisfaction. By which means (he said) he got a great deal of Money at several times, of such Persons; who rather than suffer themselves to be exposed (some of them being Men of good appearance) gave him either Money, Rings, or Watches, or what else they had then about them. Which he would fain perswade me was the only thing that had brought this Prosecution upon him; acknowledging at the same time, that it was just with God thus to punish him, for having concealed and conniv'd at those foul Acts, which he easily might have discover'd and brought to Justice, as he ought to have done. But the Love of filthy Lucre had kept him from it; though it had not as yet (but he could not tell whether if he had gone on in that Trade, it would not at last have) brought him to yield to their lewd and foul Practices. This is the Substance of what he said; adding only as to this Matter, That there was a certain publick House about Covent-Garden, where he knew those Sodomites us'd frequently to meet, and had seen some of them there several times. And it now repented him, that he had not made a Discovery of them, as he often had fair opportunities for it.

He seem'd all along, from the time of his Trial to that of his Death, to be very willing both to learn and practice those Religious Duties, which (by his own Confession) he he had too much neglected before. He desired both my Instructions and Prayers, which he had, and I hope were not bestow'd in vain. But God knows the Heart of Man. He was very attentive to the Word of God, when read and expounded to him; and I could not observe any thing in his Behaviour, but what was becoming a Man under his sad Circumstances. He pray'd very earnestly to God for the Pardon of his Sins; and declar'd, that he forgave all his Enemies, and dy'd in Charity with all Men.

When he was carry'd this Day from Newgate in a Cart to the Place of Execution, I met him there, and discharged, for the last time, my Ministerial Office to him. I exhorted him more and more to repent and clear his Conscience before he dy'd. To which he return'd this answer,




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