On this date in 1697, nine men hanged at Tyburn — all for property crimes.
Three were highway robbers. A fourth was a coiner. A fifth was a pickpocket. A sixth was a husbandman who stole a gelding.
The remaining three men, Thomas Houghton, Francis Cook and Francis Salisbury, operated a ring selling vellum paper bearing counterfeit sixpenny impressed duty stamps.
Their offense was against a 1694 levy titled “An act for granting to Their Majesties several duties on Vellum, Parchment and Paper for 10 years, towards carrying on the war against France”. This statute (full text here) imposed taxes of varying amounts for any number of a huge variety of officially-registered business. Routine commercial transactions now almost universally came with a rake for the taxman: “every skin or piece of vellum or parchment, or sheet of paper, upon which shall be ingrossed or written any indenture, lease, or deed-poll” had to be executed with a sixpenny stamp.
As a practical matter, such skins or pieces of vellum or parchment were sold pre-stamped, the stamp to be canceled by the parties in question when they signed on the line which is dotted. And it was this market that Houghton, Cook, and Salisbury exploited.
While counterfeiting the specie could be held to imperil the kingdom so dangerously to rate as treason, this trio’s “counterfeiting” was just everyday white-collar siphoning. By forging a bogus sixpenny stamp and applying it to sheafs of contract-ready vellum that they could sell at market rates, they got the revenue-agent’s cut — not the crown. (The scam is described in their Newgate Calendar entry, which inexplicably gives short shrift to Francis Cook.)
Though the “war against France” named by the stamp bill — the War of the League of Augsburg or the Nine Years’ War — had ended weeks before even the hangings we mark on this date, the lucrative levy long outlasted it. In the following century, England revived this type of tax often, notably in 1712 expanding it to encompass printed publications like newspapers and pamphlets. Hey, just require anything printed on paper to have a royal stamp on it — easy! This habit would eventually create the 1765 Stamp Act so obnoxious to North American colonists in the run-up to the American Revolution.
On this day..
- 1929: Yakov Blumkin, Trotskyist spy
- 1740: Ned Darcy, of the Kellymount Gang
- 1913: Captain Manuel Sanchez Lopez
- 1865: Samuel Clarke, Jamaican radical
- 1591: Brian O'Rourke, Irish lord
- 1854: William Lipsey and James Logan, in gold rush Coloma
- 1941: Alfredo Castoldi, German spy in Vichy Algiers
- Which U.S. Governors have overseen the most executions?
- 1858: Henry Jackson, in Decatur
- 1324: Petronilla de Meath, the first Irish woman burned for heresy
- 1991: Barrios Altos massacre
- 1942: Duncan Scott-Ford, because loose lips sink ships
- 1793: Olympe de Gouges, a head of her time
- 1783: John Austin