William Booth (forger)
William Booth (1776–1812) was an English farmer and forger, who was hanged for his crimes. He is the subject of the song "Twice Tried, Twice Hung, Twice Buried" by Jon Raven[1] and a book. Several geographical features in Birmingham, near his former home, carry his name.
William Booth | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | |
Resting place | St Mary's Church, Handsworth |
Nationality | English |
Occupation | Farmer |
Conviction(s) | Forgery |
Criminal penalty | Death by hanging |
Early life
Booth was born at Hall End Farm near Beaudesert, Warwickshire and was baptised at the church there on 21 February 1776.[2] He was one of eight children of a farmer and church warden, John Booth, and his wife Mary.[3]
On 28 February 1799, Booth signed a 25-year lease for what became known (by 1821 if not earlier)[4] as "Booth's Farm", including a farmhouse[lower-alpha 1] and 200 acres of land,[4] part of the Perry Hall[lower-alpha 2] estate.[4] The farm was then in Perry Barr, Staffordshire; that part of Perry Barr is now known as Great Barr, and is in the city of Birmingham.
Booth, then descried as a yeoman, was accused of murdering his brother John while revisiting Hall End on 19 February 1808, but was acquitted for lack of evidence.[upper-roman 1][3][5]
Criminal activity
After the Napoleonic Wars caused the government of William Pitt the Younger to order the Bank of England to restrict gold supply – the so-called "Restriction Period" – and to issue new, low-denomination, and easily-reproducible, bank notes,[6] Booth converted the top floor of the farmhouse into a fortified workshop where he produced forgeries of those banknotes, as well as promissory notes, coins, tokens and other material of monetary value.[7][8][9]
Once his activities came to light, a raiding party was convened on 16 March 1812, led by a constable from Birmingham, John Linwood, and comprising ten special constables and seven dragoons.[7][10]
Booth was arrested, and charged with five counts:[10]
- "forging a 1l. note, purporting to be a promissory note of the Bank of England"
- "for making paper, and having in [his] possession and using a mould for making paper, with words 'Bank of England' therein"
- "for using plates for making promissory notes in imitation of Bank of England notes, and for having blank bank notes in their possession without a written authority from the Governor and Company of the Bank of England, against Statute of 45th Geo. III."
- "for coining dollars, against the statute 44th Geo. III.—The indictment charged the prisoners with coining a piece of coin called a dollar, having an impression on the obverse side of his Majesty's head, and the words 'Georgius—III. Dei Gratia Rex,' and on the reverse, a figure of Britannia, and the words 'Five Shillings. Dollar. Bank of England, 1804.'"
- "for coining 3s. Bank Tokens, against the Statute of 51st of his present Majesty"
Each was tried consecutively, with the same jury throughout, before Simon Le Blanc,[10] at Stafford Assizes[11] over two days,[10] on 31 July and 1 August.[8] He was found guilty on all counts and sentenced to hang.[10]
Booth's public execution, outside Stafford jail,[12] on 15 August 1812 was bungled, and he fell through the scaffold's trap door to the floor.[3] Within two hours, he was hanged again and died.[upper-roman 2][1]
He is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's, Handsworth.[lower-alpha 3][9] The inscription on his gravestone reads:[upper-roman 3][13]
Sacred to the memory of William Booth who departed this life August 15th 1812 aged 33 years. Also Charlotte daughter of William and Mary Booth who died August 13th 5 months.
He was survived by his father,[7] wife, sister, and two daughters, aged about fourteen, and three.[8]
Following a change of county boundary, his body was disinterred and reburied.[1]
A public outcry at the harshness of his sentence and others resulted in the death penalty in England and Wales being reserved for capital crimes.[14]
Booth also minted genuine tokens as a cover for his forging activities.[15] Several of his tokens, forgeries and printing plates are in the collection of Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery. One token is in the British Museum.[16]
Co-conspirators
Booth's accomplices were tried alongside him[7] and those convicted were sentenced to transportation to Australia.[3][10]
Elizabeth Chidlow (or Chedlow[17]) was sentenced to 14 years, departing in August 1813 on the Wanstead.[18] Prior to the voyage, she wrote, from the ship, at Deptford, on 8 July 1813, to the Bank of England:[19]
Honnerd Gentlemen I hope you will Pardon the Liberty I have takeing in Riteing to you But it is nesseaty that oblidges me to it for I am in Grate Distress and as you have Been so Good as to give the other Poor unfortunate Women a little as I was Conveceted at Stafford with Mr Booths and Mrs Booth as Baveid very Ill to me and I am very much in want of nessarys and I hope your Goodness will think of me and your humble Pertichner is in Duty Bound and will for Ever pray for you Elizabeth Chedlow
and received £5 from them[17] as it was their charitable custom to support women sentenced to transportation for forgery.[20] She arrived at Port Jackson (now Sydney), New South Wales on 9 January 1814.[18]
George Scot and John Yates Snr., were each sentenced to be transported for seven years.[10] All the other defendants were acquitted.[10] Booth's wife, who witnesses said was active in the process of making forgeries, was not charged, as wives were considered to be under the control of their husbands.[10]
Booth's Farm
The farmhouse was demolished in 1974,[4] much of the farm – still known as Booth's Farm – having been sold off for housing. An archaeological excavation was conducted at that time.[21] As late as October 1956, 45 bank tokens forged by Booth, using metal alloy instead of silver, were found in a garden on Foden Road, formerly part of the farm.[12][22]
What remained of the farm became a sand and gravel quarry (the site is on Bunter Pebble Beds[21]), and later a landfill site and eventually a nature reserve, with additional housing built in the 2010s. During the latter period, the buried foundations of the farmhouse were re-exposed and an information board placed alongside them.[upper-roman 4]
Namesakes
Booth and his farm gave their name to the still-extant Booths Lane[lower-alpha 4] and Booths Farm Road,[lower-alpha 5] now separated from each other by the M6 motorway which bisected the former farm when it opened circa 1972. In the 21st century, Forgers Walk[lower-alpha 6]—the pedestrian tunnel under the motorway—and later Booths Farm Walk,[lower-alpha 7] Booths Farm Close,[lower-alpha 8] Forger Lane,[lower-alpha 9] and Token Rise, all nearby, were so named.
Until the late 1920s, the farm was occupied by the Foden Family,[4] commemorated in Foden Road.[lower-alpha 10]
The area around Booths Farm Road is known as the Booths Farm Estate.[upper-roman 5][24]
Notes
- Court documents give Booth's age in 1808 as 30; this does not match his date of baptism.[5]
- Booth is often claimed to be one of the last people (if not the last) to be sentenced to death in England for forgery.[11] However, there were 32 such executions in 1817 alone.[6]
- Note that his stated age again does not match his date of baptism
- As of July 2020, aerial imagery in OpenStreetMap's JOSM editor variously shows the area still grassed over (Bing imagery), or as a worksite (Esri clarity imagery). Google Maps shows the exposed ruins; see "Booth's farmhouse" coordinates.
- When the Booths Farm Estate was laid out, in the 1920s and 1930s, most of the new roads were named after airfields: Calshot (actually a sea plane base), Cardington, Cramlington, Duxford, Fowlmere, Hamble, Heston, Mildenhall, Northolt, Thetford, Turnberry.[23]
Coordinates
- Booth's farmhouse: 52.544362°N 1.911063°W
- Perry Hall: 52.52507°N 1.91084°W
- St Mary's Church: 52.51056°N 1.91917°W
- Booths Lane: 52.544265°N 1.910232°W
- Booths Farm Road: 52.54031°N 1.91951°W
- Forgers Walk: 52.542975°N 1.914309°W
- Booths Farm Way: 52.545431°N 1.911193°W
- Booths Farm Close: 52.544435°N 1.911273°W
- Forger Lane: 52.542924°N 1.909043°W
- Foden Road: 52.53958°N 1.92093°W
References
- "Twice Tried, Twice Hung, Twice Buried". Retrieved 8 November 2011.
- Warwickshire, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1535-1812 William Booth, son of John and Mary Booth, Baptised 21 Feb 1776 in Beaudesert, Warwickshire, England
- Booth, John N. Booths in History. p. 39.
- "Newsletter 10" (PDF). Barr and Aston Local History Society. Spring 2005. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
- "Lent Assizes Brief for the prosecution in Rex v. William Booth late of Wootton Wawen,..." National Archives. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- Crosby, Mark. "The Bank Restriction Act (1797) and Banknote Forgery". BRANCH: Britain, Representation, and Nineteenth-Century History.
Of the 142 prosecutions in 1817, 95 persons were convicted and 32 executed.
- – via Wikisource. . 15 August 1812
- Anonymous (c. 1812). – via Wikisource.
- "Booth's Farm". Digital Handsworth. Birmingham City Council. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
- Anon. (1812). – via Wikisource. . Wolverhampton: Gower and Smart
- "William Booth by an unknown artist". Digital Handsworth. Birmingham City Council. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
- Hawkes, Harry (16 December 2000). "Local Forger Paid the Ultimate Price for His Indiscretions". Birmingham Post.
- "William Booth's Grave at St. Mary's Church". Digital Handsworth. Birmingham City Council. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
- John Nicholls Booth (1982). Booths in history: Their roots and lives, encounters, and achievements. Ridgeway Press. ISBN 978-0943230009.
- "Penny token by William Booth (obverse)". Digital Handsworth. Birmingham City Council. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
- "token". The British Museum. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
- "Index of Prisoner/Letter Writers: A-L". British History Online. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
- "Elizabeth Chidlow". Convict Records. State Library of Queensland. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
- "Letters, nos 636 and 636". British History Online. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
- Kollewe, Julia (3 April 2014). "Bank of England releases letters from prisoners convicted of forging notes". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
- Hodder, Michael Anthony (1988). The Development of Some Aspects of Settlement and Land Use in Sutton Chase (PDF) (Thesis). University of Birmingham. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
- "Bank Tokens Were Forgeries". Birmingham Daily Post. 5 October 1956. p. 5.
- Chinn, Carl (2003). The Streets of Brum. Part 1. Studley: Brewin. p. 19. ISBN 1-85858-245-8.
- "Consultees details for Planning Application – 2010/01963/PA". Birmingham City Council.
Booths Farm Estate Neighbourhood Watch [...] Booths Farm Neighbourhood Forum [...] Booths Farm Residents Association
Further reading
- Anon. (1812). – via Wikisource. . Stafford: J. Drewry