Moll King (criminal)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Moll King was a 17th-century
London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
criminal.


Biography

Little is known of King's early life; she was probably a native Londoner and born in the 1670s. In October 1693 she had one of her hands branded after robbing a house in St Giles,
Cripplegate Cripplegate was a gate in the London Wall which once enclosed the City of London. The gate gave its name to the Cripplegate ward of the City which straddles the line of the former wall and gate, a line which continues to divide the ward into ...
. It is thought she married a city officer in 1718. King went into business with infamous London criminal
Jonathan Wild Jonathan Wild, also spelled Wilde (1682 or 1683 – 24 May 1725), was a London underworld figure notable for operating on both sides of the law, posing as a public-spirited vigilante entitled the "'' Thief-Taker General''". He simultaneously ran ...
, from whom she learned pick-pocketing. In October 1718, King, now using the name Mary Gilstone, was arrested for stealing a gold watch from a woman near
St Anne's Church, Soho Saint Anne's Church serves in the Church of England the Soho section of London. It was consecrated on 21 March 1686 by Bishop Henry Compton as the parish church of the new civil and ecclesiastical parish of St Anne, created from part of the pari ...
. She was sentenced to death in December 1718, but this was commuted to fourteen years' transportation to America when it was confirmed by a 'Panel of Matrons' that she was pregnant. After her baby was weaned, King was transported on the convict ship ''Susannah and Sarah'', to Annapolis, Maryland, arriving on 23 April 1720, but within a short time had returned to England. It is assumed that King's connection with Jonathan Wild facilitated her release. In Annapolis King had teamed up with fellow felon Richard Bird, originally from
Whitechapel Whitechapel is a district in East London and the future administrative centre of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is a part of the East End of London, east of Charing Cross. Part of the historic county of Middlesex, the area formed ...
, and the pair travelled back to England together, King using the name Bird. In June 1721, King was arrested robbing a house in Little Russell Street, Covent Garden and incarcerated in Newgate Prison. The legal documents from this case refer to King, alias Moll Bird, alias Mary Godson. Jonathan Wild was able to use his influence with "tame" magistrates for the charges to be dropped. A second indictment for returning from transportation was added, and in January 1722 King was again transported to America, this time on the ship ''Gilbert''. However, by June 1722 she was back in London and in September that year was arrested and returned to Newgate. She was again transported to America in June 1723. In 1723, a man named John Stanley was hanged for murdering his mistress. According to a pamphlet which was published after Stanley's death, he had allegedly been intimate with Moll King as well. In 1734, King was allegedly sentenced to transportation to America a final time.


''Moll Flanders''

Historical analyst Gerald Howson argues in his 1985 book, ''Thief-Taker General: Jonathan Wild and the Emergence of Crime and Corruption As a Way of Life in Eighteenth-Century England'', that Moll Kings' story had inspired Daniel Defoe to write his novel, '' Moll Flanders''. While King was imprisoned at Newgate in 1721, novelist Daniel Defoe began writing about her. Defoe was visiting his friend, the journalist
Nathaniel Mist Nathaniel Mist (died 30 September 1737) was an 18th-century British printer and journalist whose ''Mist's Weekly Journal'' was the central, most visible, and most explicit opposition newspaper to the whig administrations of Robert Walpole. Whe ...
, when he began mentioning Moll King in his notes.


References


Bibliography

* * * * * {{Authority control Criminals from London Prisoners sentenced to death by England and Wales Pickpockets 17th-century English criminals