The Suffolk parricide : being the trial, life, transactions and last dying words of Charles Drew, of Long-Melford in the county of Suffolk, who was executed at St. Edmund's-Bury on Wednesday the 9th of April for the inhuman murder of his father Charles John Drew, Esq., attorney at Law by shooting him thro' the body at his own house on Thursday the 31st of January 1739-40 : containing 1. An account of his extravagancies and debaucheries which drove him to necessity and induced him to commit this horrid fact. 2. The scheme he laid to perpetrate it, his getting acquainted with John Humphreys, the manner in which he prevailed upon him to undertake the murder of his father and the reasons that induced him thereto. 3. A particular account of the execution of the fact of Humphreys's refusing to do it and of Charles Drew (the son) taking the musket from Humphreys and shooting his father. 4. His behaviour afterwards and his getting Mr. Gent to draw up an advertisement and offering a reward for apprehending the murderer in order to screen himself and take off the suspicion of his being concerned. 5. The means of discovering it by Mr. Mace and true copies of the letters that were produced and by which they got an insight into the whole affair. 6. The manner in which it was discovered an account of Drew's examination and copies of the informations given before Col. de Veil and his being sent to Newgate. 7. His behaviour there and endeavouring to corrupt Jonathan Keate, the Turnkey to let him escape. 8. His trial at large at the assizes held at St. Edmund's Bury / by a Gentleman of Long-Melford.
1740
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Title
The Suffolk parricide : being the trial, life, transactions and last dying words of Charles Drew, of Long-Melford in the county of Suffolk, who was executed at St. Edmund's-Bury on Wednesday the 9th of April for the inhuman murder of his father Charles John Drew, Esq., attorney at Law by shooting him thro' the body at his own house on Thursday the 31st of January 1739-40 : containing 1. An account of his extravagancies and debaucheries which drove him to necessity and induced him to commit this horrid fact. 2. The scheme he laid to perpetrate it, his getting acquainted with John Humphreys, the manner in which he prevailed upon him to undertake the murder of his father and the reasons that induced him thereto. 3. A particular account of the execution of the fact of Humphreys's refusing to do it and of Charles Drew (the son) taking the musket from Humphreys and shooting his father. 4. His behaviour afterwards and his getting Mr. Gent to draw up an advertisement and offering a reward for apprehending the murderer in order to screen himself and take off the suspicion of his being concerned. 5. The means of discovering it by Mr. Mace and true copies of the letters that were produced and by which they got an insight into the whole affair. 6. The manner in which it was discovered an account of Drew's examination and copies of the informations given before Col. de Veil and his being sent to Newgate. 7. His behaviour there and endeavouring to corrupt Jonathan Keate, the Turnkey to let him escape. 8. His trial at large at the assizes held at St. Edmund's Bury / by a Gentleman of Long-Melford.
Imprint
London : Printed for J. Standen, 1740.
Description
44 pages : illustrations.
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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