The genuine account of the life and trial of Eugene Aram, school-master for the murder of Daniel Clark, late of Knaresbrough, in the county of York : who was convicted at York Assizes, August 3, 1759, before the Honourable William Noel, Esq., one of His Majesty's justices of the Court of Common Pleas : to which, after a short narration of the fact is prefixed, an account of the remarkable discovery of the human skeleton at Thistle-Hill, a detail of all the judicial proceedings from the time of the bones being found, to the commitment of Richard Houseman, Eugene Aram, and Henry Terry to York Castle, the depositions of Anna Aram, Philip Coates, John Yates, &c., the examination and confession of Richard Houseman, the apprehending of Eugene Aram, at Lynn, in Norfolk, with his examination and commitment : to which are added, the remarkable defence he made on his trial, his own account of himself, written after his condemnation, with the apology, which he left in his cell, for the attempt he made on his own life, and his plan for a lexicon, some pieces of poetry, &c. / all taken immediately from the original depositions, papers, and the manuscripts of E. Aram.
1759
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Title
The genuine account of the life and trial of Eugene Aram, school-master for the murder of Daniel Clark, late of Knaresbrough, in the county of York : who was convicted at York Assizes, August 3, 1759, before the Honourable William Noel, Esq., one of His Majesty's justices of the Court of Common Pleas : to which, after a short narration of the fact is prefixed, an account of the remarkable discovery of the human skeleton at Thistle-Hill, a detail of all the judicial proceedings from the time of the bones being found, to the commitment of Richard Houseman, Eugene Aram, and Henry Terry to York Castle, the depositions of Anna Aram, Philip Coates, John Yates, &c., the examination and confession of Richard Houseman, the apprehending of Eugene Aram, at Lynn, in Norfolk, with his examination and commitment : to which are added, the remarkable defence he made on his trial, his own account of himself, written after his condemnation, with the apology, which he left in his cell, for the attempt he made on his own life, and his plan for a lexicon, some pieces of poetry, &c. / all taken immediately from the original depositions, papers, and the manuscripts of E. Aram.
Added Corporate Author
Edition
2nd ed.
Imprint
London : W. Bristow, [1759?]
Description
86 pages.
Series
Making of modern law. Trials, 1600-1926.
Note
Reproduction of the original from Harvard Law School Library.
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Language
English
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Gale, a part of Cengage Learning, 2007. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.
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