1834 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (3): Difference between revisions

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  |data3=Theft at the Robin Hood [Robin Hood Court, Shoe Lane?]
  |data3=[[About::Theft at the Robin Hood [Robin Hood Court, Shoe Lane?]]]
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{{#display_map:51.5162,-0.1069|width=34%}}<div class="pnMapLegend">Site of the Robin Hood, Shoe Lane, Holborn.</div>
{{#display_map:51.5162,-0.1069|width=34%|enablefullscreen=yes}}<div class="pnMapLegend">Site of the Robin Hood, Shoe Lane, Holborn.</div><div class="no-img">
<p id="byline">By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-06-18. Revised by {{#realname:{{REVISIONUSER}}}}, {{REVISIONYEAR}}-{{REVISIONMONTH}}-{{REVISIONDAY2}}.</p>
<p id="byline">By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-06-18. Revised by {{#realname:{{REVISIONUSER}}}}, {{REVISIONYEAR}}-{{REVISIONMONTH}}-{{REVISIONDAY2}}.</p>
<div class="no-img">
== Record ==
=== Record ===
<onlyinclude>
<onlyinclude>
{{quote|[15 May 1834:]<br/>
{{quote|[15 May 1834:]<br/>
WILLIAM FROST. I lodge at the <keyword>Robin Hood public-house</keyword>: the prisoner slept in the same bed with me. On the morning of the 7th of May, I saw him out of bed between three and four o'clock - I remarked that it was rather early - he said, yes; but he was going to Newgate-market - I sat up and looked for my clothes, which I had left on the bed, and which were not there then - I found them by the bed side - I took up my trousers, and felt in them for a crown-piece, two shillings, and some half-pence, which I knew I had left in the pocket - they were all safe - I put them down again, and the prisoner went out of the room - I laid down, and in a few minutes he came into the room again - I suppose he thought I was asleep - I saw him take my trousers, and he was pushing up the pocket to get the money out - he went down - I jumped up and ran after him - I said, "Halloo" - he said, "Halloo," and came up into the bed-room again - I came up with him - I shut the door, and challenged him with having my crown-piece - he said he had not - I said he had - I got my clothes on, and locked the door of the room while I went out for a policeman - I saw a bricklayer's labourer, and sent him for a policeman - in about two minutes the policeman came; and, as we went up stairs, I heard the prisoner jump out of the window, which is on the first-floor - I opened the door, and he was not in the room - the window looked into some stable yards.<ref>[https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t18340515-116&div=t18340515-116&terms=Robin_Hood#highlight Proceedings of the Old Bailey: 15 May 1834.]</ref>}}</onlyinclude>
WILLIAM FROST. I lodge at the <keyword>Robin Hood public-house</keyword>: the prisoner slept in the same bed with me. On the morning of the 7th of May, I saw him out of bed between three and four o'clock - I remarked that it was rather early - he said, yes; but he was going to Newgate-market - I sat up and looked for my clothes, which I had left on the bed, and which were not there then - I found them by the bed side - I took up my trousers, and felt in them for a crown-piece, two shillings, and some half-pence, which I knew I had left in the pocket - they were all safe - I put them down again, and the prisoner went out of the room - I laid down, and in a few minutes he came into the room again - I suppose he thought I was asleep - I saw him take my trousers, and he was pushing up the pocket to get the money out - he went down - I jumped up and ran after him - I said, "Halloo" - he said, "Halloo," and came up into the bed-room again - I came up with him - I shut the door, and challenged him with having my crown-piece - he said he had not - I said he had - I got my clothes on, and locked the door of the room while I went out for a policeman - I saw a bricklayer's labourer, and sent him for a policeman - in about two minutes the policeman came; and, as we went up stairs, I heard the prisoner jump out of the window, which is on the first-floor - I opened the door, and he was not in the room - the window looked into some stable yards.<ref>[https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t18340515-116&div=t18340515-116&terms=Robin_Hood#highlight Proceedings of the Old Bailey: 15 May 1834.]</ref>}}</onlyinclude>


=== Source notes ===
== Source notes ==
IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at [https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t18340515-116&div=t18340515-116&terms=Robin_Hood#highlight Proceedings of the Old Bailey] from the PDF of the original printed edition.
IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at [https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?id=t18340515-116&div=t18340515-116&terms=Robin_Hood#highlight Proceedings of the Old Bailey] from the PDF of the original printed edition.


=== IRHB comments ===
== IRHB comments ==
It is not clear at which Robin Hood inn the crime was committed, but the fact that the perpetrator was (ostensibly) going to Newgate market makes the [[Robin Hood (Holborn)|Robin Hood in Robin Hood Court, Shoe Lane, Holborn]], the most likely scene of the crime, for it was slightly closer to the market than the [[Holborn place-name cluster|other two Robin Hood inns in Holborn]]. Newmarket, for centuries London's wholesale and retail meat market, was located in a rather confined space south of Newgate Street and north of St Paul's Churchyard,<ref>{{:Thornbury, George Walter 1878a}}, vol. II, p. 491.</ref> only some 500 m ESE of Shoe Lane.
It is not clear at which Robin Hood inn the crime was committed, but the fact that the perpetrator was (ostensibly) going to Newgate market makes the [[Robin Hood (Holborn)|Robin Hood in Robin Hood Court, Shoe Lane, Holborn]], the most likely scene of the crime, for it was slightly closer to the market than the [[Holborn place-name cluster|other two Robin Hood inns in Holborn]]. Newmarket, for centuries London's wholesale and retail meat market, was located in a rather confined space south of Newgate Street and north of St Paul's Churchyard,<ref>{{:Thornbury, George Walter 1878a}}, vol. II, p. 491.</ref> only some 500 m ESE of Shoe Lane.


=== Lists ===
== Lists ==
* Not included in {{:Sussex, Lucy 1994a}}.
* Not included in {{:Sussex, Lucy 1994a}}.


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** [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/old-new-london/vol2/pp491-496 British History Online: The Metropolitan Meat-Market] (online version without pagination).
** [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/old-new-london/vol2/pp491-496 British History Online: The Metropolitan Meat-Market] (online version without pagination).


=== Also see ===
== Also see ==
* [[1692 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1)]]
* [[1692 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1)]]
* [[1813 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1)]]
* [[1813 - Proceedings of the Old Bailey (1)]]
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* [[Robin Hood (Holborn)]].
* [[Robin Hood (Holborn)]].


=== Notes ===
== Notes ==
<references/>
<references/>


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[[Category:Records (Robin Hood, Holborn)]]
[[Category:Records (Robin Hood, Holborn)]]
[[Category:Proceedings of the Old Bailey]]
[[Category:Proceedings of the Old Bailey]]

Latest revision as of 21:07, 8 January 2021

Record
Date 1834
Topic Theft at the Robin Hood [Robin Hood Court, Shoe Lane?]
Loading map...
Site of the Robin Hood, Shoe Lane, Holborn.

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2018-06-18. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2021-01-08.

Record

[15 May 1834:]
WILLIAM FROST. I lodge at the Robin Hood public-house: the prisoner slept in the same bed with me. On the morning of the 7th of May, I saw him out of bed between three and four o'clock - I remarked that it was rather early - he said, yes; but he was going to Newgate-market - I sat up and looked for my clothes, which I had left on the bed, and which were not there then - I found them by the bed side - I took up my trousers, and felt in them for a crown-piece, two shillings, and some half-pence, which I knew I had left in the pocket - they were all safe - I put them down again, and the prisoner went out of the room - I laid down, and in a few minutes he came into the room again - I suppose he thought I was asleep - I saw him take my trousers, and he was pushing up the pocket to get the money out - he went down - I jumped up and ran after him - I said, "Halloo" - he said, "Halloo," and came up into the bed-room again - I came up with him - I shut the door, and challenged him with having my crown-piece - he said he had not - I said he had - I got my clothes on, and locked the door of the room while I went out for a policeman - I saw a bricklayer's labourer, and sent him for a policeman - in about two minutes the policeman came; and, as we went up stairs, I heard the prisoner jump out of the window, which is on the first-floor - I opened the door, and he was not in the room - the window looked into some stable yards.[1]

Source notes

IRHB has silently regularized the use of spaces before punctuation marks in the quotation and corrected the HTML text at Proceedings of the Old Bailey from the PDF of the original printed edition.

IRHB comments

It is not clear at which Robin Hood inn the crime was committed, but the fact that the perpetrator was (ostensibly) going to Newgate market makes the Robin Hood in Robin Hood Court, Shoe Lane, Holborn, the most likely scene of the crime, for it was slightly closer to the market than the other two Robin Hood inns in Holborn. Newmarket, for centuries London's wholesale and retail meat market, was located in a rather confined space south of Newgate Street and north of St Paul's Churchyard,[2] only some 500 m ESE of Shoe Lane.

Lists

Sources

Background

Also see

Notes