fbpx
Wikipedia

Great Gold Robbery

The Great Gold Robbery took place on the night of 15 May 1855, when a routine shipment of three boxes of gold bullion and coins was stolen from the guard's van of the service between London Bridge station and Folkestone while it was being shipped to Paris. The robbers comprised four men, two of whom—William Tester and James Burgess—were employees of the South Eastern Railway (SER), the company that ran the rail service. They were joined by the planners of the crime: Edward Agar, a career criminal, and William Pierce, a former employee of the SER who had been dismissed for being a gambler.

Contemporary news illustration of Agar and Burgess in the guard's van, emptying the safes of the gold

During transit, the gold was held in "railway safes", which needed two keys to open. The men took wax impressions of the keys and made their own copies. When they knew a shipment was taking place, Tester ensured Burgess was on guard duty, and Agar hid in the guard's van. They emptied the safes of 224 pounds (102 kg) of gold, valued at the time at £12,000 (approximately equivalent to £1,193,000 in 2021), then left the train at Dover. The police and railway authorities had no clues as to who had undertaken the theft, and arguments ensued as to whether it had been stolen in England, on the ship crossing the English Channel, or on the French leg of the journey.

When Agar was arrested for another crime, he asked Pierce to provide Fanny Kay—his former girlfriend—and child with funds. Pierce agreed and then reneged. In need of money, Kay went to the governor of Newgate Prison and told him who had undertaken the theft. Agar was questioned, admitted his guilt and testified as a witness. Pierce, Tester and Burgess were all arrested, tried and found guilty of the theft. Pierce received a sentence of two years' hard labour in England; Tester and Burgess were sentenced to penal transportation for 14 years.

The crime was the subject of a television play in 1960, with Colin Blakely as Pierce. The Great Train Robbery, a novel by the writer and director Michael Crichton, was published in 1975. Crichton adapted his work into a feature film, The First Great Train Robbery, with Sean Connery portraying Pierce.

Background

South Eastern Railway

 
Headquarters of the SER, near London Bridge station
 
Route of the SER, from London Bridge to Folkestone

In 1855 the South Eastern Railway (SER) ran a boat train service between London Bridge station and Folkestone, on the south coast of England. It provided part of the main route to Paris at the time, with a railway steamer from Folkestone to Boulogne-sur-Mer, northern France, and a train to complete the journey direct to Paris.[1] The service ran at 8:00 am, 11:30 am and 4:30 pm; there was also an overnight mail service that left at 8:30 pm and a tidal ferry service.[2] Periodically the line would carry shipments of gold from bullion merchants in London to their counterparts in Paris; these could be several hundredweights at a time.[2] The bullion would be packed into wooden boxes, bound with iron hoops and with a wax seal bearing the coat of arms of the bullion dealers in question: Abell & Co, Adam Spielmann & Co and Messrs Bult & Co. The agents who arranged the carriage of the gold, including collecting the bullion from the three companies and delivering it to London Bridge, were Chaplin & Co. The gold shipments always went on the 8:30 pm train.[3][4] At Boulogne the bullion boxes were collected by the French agents Messageries impériales before being transported by train to the Gare du Nord and then to the Bank of France.[5]

As a security measure, the boxes were weighed when they were loaded onto the guard's van, at Folkestone, on arrival at Boulogne and then again on arrival in Paris.[6] The company's guard's vans were fitted with three patented "railway safes" provided by Chubb & Son. These were three-feet (0.91 m) square and made of inch-thick (2.5 cm) steel. Access to the safe was through its lid, which was hinged for access; the exterior had two keyholes, high on the front.[2][5] Each of the three safes had the same pair of locks, meaning that only two keys were needed to open all three safes.[6] Copies of the keys were held separately by SER officials at London Bridge and Folkestone, and the company ensured no individual could hold both keys at the same time.[5]

Participants

 
William Tester, James Burgess and Edward Agar in court

The originator of the plan was William Pierce, a 37-year-old former employee of the SER who had been dismissed from its service after it was found that he was a gambler; he worked as a ticket printer in a betting shop after leaving the company.[6] According to the historian Donald Thomas, Pierce was "a large-faced and rather clumsy man with a taste for loud waistcoats and fancy trousers. ... he was described as 'imperfectly educated'. The turf was his true schooling".[7]

The burglar and safe-cracker Edward Agar was just under 40 at the time of the robbery and had been a professional thief since he was 18. He returned to the UK in 1853 after ten years spent in Australia and the US.[7] He had £3,000 in government consol bonds and lived in the fashionable area of Shepherd's Bush, London.[6][a] According to Thomas, the robbery "grew almost entirely from the absolute self-confidence and mental ability" of Agar.[7]

 
Fanny Kay—Agar's partner—with their child

James Burgess was a married, thrifty and respectable man who had worked at the SER since it had started running the Folkestone line in 1843.[9] He worked for the company as a guard, and was often in charge of the trains that carried the bullion.[3] As with many railwaymen of the time, Burgess's wages had been reduced as the railway boom had passed.[9]

Fanny Kay, aged 23 in 1855, was Agar's partner and lived with him at his house, Cambridge Villa, in Shepherd's Bush. She had previously been an attendant at Tonbridge railway station and had been introduced to Agar by Burgess in 1853. She had a child with Agar and moved in with him in December 1854.[10]

William Tester was a well-educated man who wore a monocle and had a desire to improve his position; he was briefly employed after the robbery as a general manager for a Swedish railway company. He worked in the traffic department at London Bridge station as the assistant to the superintendent, which gave him access to information about the carriage of valuable goods and the guards' rota.[11][12]

James Townshend Saward, also known as Jim (or Jem) the Penman, was a barrister and special pleader at the Inner Temple.[13] His activities were described by contemporary sources as "planning and perfecting schemes of fraud, the bold audacity of which is equalled only by their success".[14] He was the head of a forgery gang who had been practising cheque fraud for several years.[15]

Planning and preparation

 
Pierce giving a Chubb key to Agar at the Folkestone railway station

After being dismissed from the SER, Pierce continued to drink in the pubs and beer shops around London Bridge in which railway employees also drank. Over time he picked up detailed information about the gold shipments to Paris,[2] while he watched and planned. He concluded that a theft would only be possible if he obtained copies of the keys to the safe.[16] He relayed his thoughts to Agar before the latter's visit to the US;[6][17] at the time Agar declined to take part, telling his friend the scheme was impracticable. When Agar returned to Britain, the two discussed the possibility again and Agar said that "it would be impossible to do it unless an impression of the keys could be procured".[18] Pierce said he thought he knew how that could be arranged. They realised that for any theft to succeed, they needed the assistance of a guard travelling in the van with the safes, and an official with access to the staff rotas and who knew when the bullion shipments were to be made.[19] It was at this stage that Pierce recruited Burgess and Tester to join the group.[20]

In May 1854 Pierce and Agar travelled to Folkestone to watch the process involved at that end of the line, particularly the location and security surrounding the keys. They spent so long, and were so obvious, in their surveillance that they came to the notice of the municipal and railway police. As a result, Pierce returned to London and left Agar to watch alone.[17][21] As part of his intelligence gathering, Agar drank in the Rose Inn, a public house near the pier, where railway staff also drank.[22] The pair concluded that one of the keys was carried by the superintendent of the Folkestone end of the line; the other was locked in a cabinet at the railway offices on Folkestone pier.[23]

 

One of the keys held at Folkestone was lost in July 1854 by Captain Mold of the steamship company.[b] The SER sent the safes back to Chubb for the locks to be reconditioned and new keys issued. The clerk involved in corresponding with the company was Tester.[25] By October, Chubb's work had been completed and the keys sent to the SER. Tester was able to smuggle them out of the office briefly, and met Pierce and Agar in a beer house on Tooley Street, London, where Agar made an impression of them in green wax. Tester was so nervous when he removed the keys, that he brought two identical ones with him, rather than one for each lock; the plotters were still missing one of the keys.[26] Agar, using the false name of E. E. Archer, used his own funds to send £200 of gold sovereigns on the SER line.[c] The box of bullion, labelled "E. R. Archer, care of Mr. Ledger, or Mr. Chapman", was sent through to Folkestone where Agar would collect it.[27] Agar collected the package from the SER office and watched while the company's superintendent retrieved the safe key from a cupboard at the back of the room. Knowing where the keys were stored, the following weekend Agar and Pierce stayed in nearby Dover and walked to Folkestone. When the boat arrived from Boulogne, both members of the SER staff left the office to meet it; they left the door unlocked when they left. Pierce entered the office while Agar waited at the door on lookout. Pierce opened the cupboard and took the safe key to Agar who made a wax impression. The key was returned, and the two men returned to London via Dover.[28]

Over the following months Pierce and Agar created rough keys from the impressions they had taken. In April and May 1855 Agar would travel along the Folkestone route when Burgess was on duty—seven or eight trips in total—and would hone the keys until they worked smoothly and without effort. Pierce and Agar then separately visited the Shot Tower, Lambeth, where they obtained two long hundredweight (220 lb; 100 kg) of lead shot. They also obtained courier bags, which could be strapped under a cloak, and carpet bags: these were to carry the lead shot onto the train, and the gold off it.[29]

By May 1855 the men were now ready to carry out the robbery, and only needed to wait for a day when a gold shipment was taking place. Tester altered the staff rosters to ensure Burgess was working on the evening mail service for the month to ensure Agar had access to the safe. A signal was arranged whereby either Agar or Pierce would wait outside London Bridge station every day; if a shipment was being made, Burgess would walk out of the station and wipe his face with a white handkerchief to alert them. At the same time, Tester would travel to Redhill railway station and await the first stop of the train. He would take one of the bags of gold and return to London.[29][30]

Robbery: 15 May 1855

 
Agar waiting at the London Bridge Station for news of the train

On 15 May 1855, while Agar was waiting outside London Bridge station, Burgess came out of the station, wiped his face with his handkerchief and went back inside. Agar notified Pierce and the two men purchased first class tickets for the journey to Folkestone. They gave their bags to Burgess for storage in the guard's van during the journey and, just before the train was due to leave, Pierce took his seat in the cabin, and Agar slipped into the guard's van and hid in the corner, covered by Burgess's overalls.[31][32]

As soon as the train departed the station, Agar began work. Only one of the locks was secured—an SER employee later reported that typically only one lock was used—and Agar soon had the bullion boxes out of the safe. Instead of opening the box through the front, he used pincers to pull the rivets out of the iron bands that bound the box, and used wedges in the reverse of the box to open the lid without too much visible damage. He removed gold bars from inside the box from Abell & Co,[d] weighed them with the scales he was carrying in the bag, and put the same weight of lead shot back into the box. He nailed the bars back around the box, then resealed a wax seal on the front, using a die he had made himself, rather than one of the official seals of the bullion dealers. He deduced—correctly—that on the poorly lit station at Folkestone, a cursory glance at the seals would not show any change. He managed to do this before the train arrived at Redhill, which was a 35-minute journey from London Bridge. When it arrived at Redhill, Agar again hid, while Tester was handed the bag containing some of the gold. He returned to the SER offices in London, as arranged, so that he could be seen by colleagues and give himself an alibi for later. Pierce took the opportunity to leave his carriage and join his confederates in the guard's van.[31][34][35]

The other two boxes were examined after the train left Redhill. The box from Adam Spielmann & Co contained hundreds of American gold eagles worth $10 each;[31][e] these were weighed and lead shot was again left in their place before the box was resealed. The final box, from Messrs Bult & Co, contained more gold bars. These weighed more than the remaining lead they had left and many of the ingots were left behind to ensure there were no major differences in the weights of the boxes when they were later weighed. When they replaced the bands on the final box, it was damaged, but they repaired it as best they could and replaced it in the safe. The three men then cleared away the mess they had made—mostly splinters and drops of wax—and prepared themselves by strapping on the courier bags beneath their cloaks. When the train arrived in Folkestone at about 10:30 pm, Pierce and Agar hid in the van while the safes were removed by staff. They then left the van and entered the main part of the train, passing through until they reached first class, where they sat until it arrived in Dover.[31][36][37] When the train reached Dover, Pierce and Agar alighted, collected their carpet bags full of gold from the guard's van, then went to a nearby hotel for supper. Agar threw the keys and tools into the sea before the two men returned to London on the 2:00 am train, which arrived at around 5:00 am.[38] In total they had stolen 224 pounds (102 kg) of gold, valued at the time at £12,000.[39][f]

Immediate aftermath

 
£300 reward notice, published in several newspapers

When the steamer carrying the gold arrived in Boulogne, one of the crew saw that the bullion boxes were damaged, but, as staff at Folkestone had not mentioned it, saw no cause for concern.[40] The boxes were weighed on arrival at Boulogne where the box from Abell was found to be 40 pounds (18 kg) lighter than it had been in London, whereas the other boxes both weighed more. They were transported to Paris, where they were weighed again, with the same results as at Boulogne. When they were opened the lead shot was found and the news relayed back to London.[41][42]

When the working day began on 16 May, Pierce and Agar went to a money-changer's shop with some of the American eagles and obtained £213 for them; at a second such shop, they exchanged 200 of them to get a cheque for just over £203.[40][g]

The three bullion merchants demanded recompense for the lost gold—most of Abell's gold was insured through the SER, but the company denied any culpability, claiming that the robbery must have taken in place in France. The French authorities pointed out that as the weights of the boxes in France both matched, and differed from that in England, it must have occurred in the UK; both the French and British companies stated "that the crime was an impossibility", according to Thomas.[42][43][44][h] Newspapers reported that "It is supposed that so well planned a scheme could not have been executed in the rapid passage by railway from London to Folkestone".[46] Burgess was examined, but not deemed a suspect because of his 14 years of service to the company. Tester had been seen at the SER offices while the train was still en route to Folkestone, so was also discounted as a potential thief.[47] A reward of £300 was soon advertised in several newspapers for information regarding the case.[48][i][j]

Discovery, investigation and arrest

 
Agar selling part of the gold to Saward

Pierce and Agar began to melt down the bars to create new, smaller bars of 100 ounces (2.8 kg), although they briefly set fire to the floor of Cambridge Villa when one of the crucibles cracked, spilling molten gold. Relations between Agar and Kay deteriorated around this time, and he moved out of their house to stay with Pierce while they continued to process and dispose of the bullion.[52]

£2,500 of bullion was sold to Saward, acting as a fence, and the proceeds split evenly between Agar, Pierce, Tester and Burgess.[42][k] Burgess invested his earnings in Turkish bonds, and shares in the brewing company Reid & Co; Pierce opened a betting shop near Covent Garden, telling friends he had won the capital by betting on Saucebox in the St Leger Stakes horse race at long odds.[42][47] Tester put his money into Spanish Active bonds. That September he left the SER and became the general manager of a Swedish railway company.[53][54]

At around the time Agar had separated from Kay, he met Emily Campbell, a 19-year-old prostitute, and the two began a relationship; Campbell's pimp, William Humphreys, took umbrage at the loss of her earnings. To overcome any problems, Agar lent Humphreys £235. When he went to collect the repaid money, he was arrested as one of Humphreys' associates passed him a bag of coins. Police stated that this was the proceeds of a cheque fraud in which he was involved and he was charged accordingly; Agar stated he knew nothing of the fraud, and he was trying to collect the money he had lent.[44][55] Appearing at the Old Bailey in September 1855 on the charge of "feloniously forging and uttering an order for the payment of 700L [£700], with intend to defraud",[l] Agar was found guilty and sentenced to penal transportation for life.[56][57] Awaiting transportation in Pentonville Prison, Agar arranged for his solicitor, Thomas Wontner, to use the £3,000 Agar had in his bank account, and give it to Pierce with instructions that it should be used to support Kay and their child. Pierce agreed, then reneged around mid-1856. Desperate for money, she went to see John Weatherhead, the governor of Newgate Prison, and told him that she knew who was involved in the SER bullion robbery. An investigation was undertaken at Cambridge Villa; police found evidence that corroborated Kay's story, including the burnt floorboards, small specks of gold in the fireplace and under the floorboards, and evidence that the fireplace had been used at a very high temperature.[58][59]

The Great Gold Robbery, in The Chronicles of Newgate

Agar was interviewed in October 1856, while still in Pentonville, by John Rees, the company solicitor for the SER; Agar refused to answer any questions, and so Rees returned around two weeks later and tried again. In the interim, Agar had heard that Pierce had not kept to his word and so, angered by the deceit of his erstwhile partner, he turned Queen's evidence and gave Rees the full details of the crime. Pierce and Burgess were arrested on 5 November. As Tester was living in Sweden he could not be arrested, but he was informed that the police wanted to interview him.[60][61]

Legal process

 
Agar under examination at the Old Bailey

In November and December 1856 hearings took place at the Mansion House, presided over by the Lord Mayor of London in his role as the Chief Magistrate of the City of London.[m] For the first two hearings, Agar was not present, but was brought to the court on the third day. When questioned, he confirmed the story he had given to the police, and identified pieces of evidence that had been gathered.[63][64] On 10 December Tester appeared in court, having been dismissed from his position with the Swedish company.[65][66] When the Lord Mayor gave his decision on 24 December that the three men were to stand trial for the robbery, Pierce said "I have nothing at all to say. I reserve my defence." Burgess and Tester both stated "I am not guilty".[67][68]

The trial took place at the Old Bailey between 13 and 15 January 1857,[69] and received wide coverage in newspapers across Britain.[70] Burgess, Tester and Pierce all pleaded not guilty. Agar gave evidence against his former colleagues again, and told the court he was, in Thomas's words, "a self-confessed professional criminal who had not made an honest living since the age of eighteen".[71] Witnesses included the locksmith John Chubb, the bullion dealers, transportation agents, SER staff, the station staff of London Bridge and Folkestone, a customs officer from Boulogne, railway police, taverners and hotel keepers. All corroborated Agar's story that the four men knew each other, and were present together at various stages of the planning and execution of the crime.[72]

It took the jury ten minutes to decide on the guilt of the three men, Pierce of larceny, Burgess and Tester of larceny as a servant.[73][74] The judge, Sir Samuel Martin, showed what the journalist Fergus Linnane calls "a grudging admiration" for Agar during his summing up:

The man Agar is a man who is as bad, I dare say, as bad can be, but that he is a man of most extraordinary ability no person who heard him examined can for a moment deny. ...
Something has been said of the romance connected with that man's character, but let those who fancy that there is anything great in it consider his fate. It is obvious ... that he is a man of extraordinary talent; that he gave to this and, perhaps, to many other robberies, an amount of care and perseverance one-tenth of which devoted to honest pursuits must have raised him to a respectable station in life, and considering the commercial activity of this country during the last twenty years, would probably have enabled him to realise a large fortune.[75]

Burgess and Tester were both sentenced to penal transportation for 14 years. Pierce, as he was not a member of SER staff, was given the lighter sentence of two years' hard labour in England, three months of which would be in solitary confinement.[76]

Later

 
The interior of the Edwin Fox, listed by Heritage New Zealand in 1999.[77]

Tester and Burgess were transported on board the Edwin Fox convict ship on 26 August 1858; the destination was the Swan River Colony in Western Australia. Burgess was given a ticket of leave in December 1859 and a conditional pardon in March 1862.[n] Tester received his ticket of leave in July 1859 and a conditional pardon in October 1861. He left Australia in 1863. Agar remained in England for a little longer; he is known to have been held in Portland Prison in February 1857, before being transported to Australia on 23 September 1857. He was given his ticket of leave in September 1860, and a conditional pardon in September 1867. He left Australia to travel to Colombo, in modern-day Sri Lanka in 1869.[78]

An account of the trial was published in 1857, with illustrations by Percy Cruikshank, the eldest son of Isaac Robert Cruikshank.[81] The history of the robbery can be found in The First Great Train Robbery, written by David C. Hanrahan in 2011.[82] In the May 1955 issue of The Railway Magazine the railway historian Michael Robbins wrote an article on the robbery;[83] in November 1980 the Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society carried an account written by the historian John Fletcher.[84]

On 25 December 1960 the television anthology series Armchair Theatre dramatised the crime under the title The Great Gold Bullion Robbery. Adapted by Malcolm Hulke and Eric Paice from a play by the lawyer Gerald Sparrow, and directed by John Llewellyn Moxey, it starred Colin Blakely as Pierce, James Booth as Agar, Henry McGee as Tester and Leslie Weston as Burgess.[85]

The writer and director Michael Crichton produced his novel The Great Train Robbery in 1975;[86] his introduction reads "The Great Train Robbery was not only shocking and appalling, but also 'daring', 'audacious' and 'masterful'."[87] A feature film based on the novel, The First Great Train Robbery (1978), presents a highly fictionalised version of the event, portraying Pierce (played by Sean Connery), as a gentleman master criminal who eventually escapes from the police.[88] The robbery also featured as one of the themes in the 2006 mystery novel Kept by D. J. Taylor.[89]

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ £3,000 in 1853 equates to approximately £323,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  2. ^ Mold was dismissed by the company for this error, so seriously was it taken.[24]
  3. ^ £200 in 1854 equates to approximately equivalent to £20,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  4. ^ Agar, in his testimony, refers to four gold bars;[33] David Hanrahan, in his history of the robbery, states it was six bars.[34]
  5. ^ $10 in 1855 equates to approximately $145 in 2023, according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  6. ^ £12,000 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to £1,193,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  7. ^ £200 in 1855 equates to approximately £22,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8] The journalist Fergus Linnane states that £200 at the time was enough to buy a suburban villa.[31]
  8. ^ An additional pointer, to the French authorities, was that the lead pellets were soft when bitten; British lead was known to be slightly softer than the French equivalent.[45]
  9. ^ £300 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to £30,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  10. ^ This included in The Times,[49] The Morning Chronicle,[48] The Morning Post[50] and The Shipping and Mercantile Gazette.[51]
  11. ^ £2,500 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to £249,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  12. ^ £700 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to £70,000 in 2021, according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[8]
  13. ^ The hearings were spread over several days: 6, 12, 13, 17 and 24 November, and 2, 10, 13 and 20 December 1856 and judgement on 24 December. They were held in front of two Lord Mayors, Sir David Salomons and his successor, Thomas Quested Finnis.[62]
  14. ^ A "ticket of leave" was given to convicts for good behaviour. It allowed them to live independently of the prison system and take employment, but only within a limited geographical area. Their behaviour was still scrutinised and the ticket could be withdrawn if the conditions were infringed. A "conditional pardon" gave freedom to a convict, but not the permission to return to the UK.[78][79][80]

References

  1. ^ Fletcher 1980, p. 77.
  2. ^ a b c d Thomas 1998, p. 209.
  3. ^ a b Griffiths 1899, p. 389.
  4. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 10–11, 61.
  5. ^ a b c Thomas 1998, p. 210.
  6. ^ a b c d e Linnane 2004, p. 84.
  7. ^ a b c Thomas 1998, p. 207.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Clark 2020.
  9. ^ a b Thomas 1998, p. 211.
  10. ^ Evans 1859, p. 238.
  11. ^ "The Great Gold Robbery, 1855". British Transport Police.
  12. ^ Linnane 2004, p. 85; Thomas 1998, p. 211; Storey 2007, p. 23.
  13. ^ Shore 2015, p. 127.
  14. ^ The Bankers' Magazine, and Journal of the Money Market 1857, p. 108.
  15. ^ Shore 2015, p. 128.
  16. ^ Storey 2007, p. 23.
  17. ^ a b Fletcher 1980, p. 78.
  18. ^ Cruikshank 1856, pp. 16–17.
  19. ^ Griffiths 1899, p. 390.
  20. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 50.
  21. ^ Robbins 1955, p. 316.
  22. ^ Matlock 2018, p. 87.
  23. ^ Thomas 1998, p. 213.
  24. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 55.
  25. ^ Thomas 1998, pp. 213–214.
  26. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 56.
  27. ^ Evans 1859, p. 488.
  28. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 58–59.
  29. ^ a b Thomas 1998, p. 217.
  30. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 61–63.
  31. ^ a b c d e Linnane 2004, p. 87.
  32. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 65–66.
  33. ^ Cruikshank 1856, p. 19.
  34. ^ a b Hanrahan 2011, p. 66.
  35. ^ Thomas 1998, pp. 218–219.
  36. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 66–67.
  37. ^ Thomas 1998, p. 220.
  38. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 67–70.
  39. ^ Cruikshank 1856, p. 3.
  40. ^ a b Thomas 1998, p. 222.
  41. ^ Thomas 1998, pp. 222–222.
  42. ^ a b c d The Times. 14 January 1857, p. 7.
  43. ^ Thomas 1998, pp. 222–223.
  44. ^ a b Linnane 2004, p. 88.
  45. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 18.
  46. ^ "The Bullion Robbery". London Evening Standard, p. 1.
  47. ^ a b Thomas 1998, pp. 224–225.
  48. ^ a b "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Morning Chronicle, p. 1.
  49. ^ "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Times, p. 8.
  50. ^ "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Morning Post, p. 1.
  51. ^ "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Shipping and Mercantile Gazette, p. 5.
  52. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 73–75.
  53. ^ The Times. 14 January 1857, p. 8.
  54. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 76–77.
  55. ^ Thomas 1998, pp. 225–226.
  56. ^ "Police". The Times, p. 9.
  57. ^ "Edward Agar". Old Bailey Proceedings Online.
  58. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 80–81.
  59. ^ Thomas 1998, pp. 226–227.
  60. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 81–82.
  61. ^ Linnane 2004, p. 89.
  62. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 84, 87, 91, 92, 98, 101, 107, 110, 111.
  63. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 92–95.
  64. ^ The Times. 18 November 1856, p. 11.
  65. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 105–107.
  66. ^ The Times. 11 December 1856, p. 8.
  67. ^ The Times. 25 December 1856, p. 9.
  68. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 111–112.
  69. ^ Robbins 1955, p. 317.
  70. ^ Shore 2015, p. 121.
  71. ^ Thomas 1998, p. 227.
  72. ^ Hanrahan 2011, pp. 141–151.
  73. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 189.
  74. ^ Cruikshank 1856, p. 45.
  75. ^ Cruikshank 1856, p. 46.
  76. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 191.
  77. ^ "Edwin Fox Hull and Anchor Windlass". Heritage New Zealand.
  78. ^ a b Hanrahan 2011, p. 199.
  79. ^ "Convicts and the British colonies in Australia". Australian Government.
  80. ^ Bradley Hirst 2008, p. 117.
  81. ^ Hanrahan 2011, p. 203.
  82. ^ Cordery 2013, pp. 106–107.
  83. ^ Robbins 1955, pp. 315–317.
  84. ^ Fletcher 1980, pp. 77–81.
  85. ^ "The Great Gold Bullion Robbery (1960)". British Film Institute.
  86. ^ Andrews 1975, p. 236.
  87. ^ Crichton 1995, p. xvii.
  88. ^ Richman 2015, p. 10.
  89. ^ Hill 2006.

Sources

Books

  • "The Great Banking Forgeries". The Bankers' Magazine, and Journal of the Money Market. London: Richard Groombridge. XVII. 1857.
  • Bradley Hirst, John (2008). Freedom on the Fatal Shore: Australia's First Colony. Melbourne, Victoria: Black Inc. ISBN 978-1-86395-207-1.
  • Crichton, Michael (1995). The Great Train Robbery. London: Arrow. ISBN 978-0-0994-8241-3.
  • Cruikshank, Percy (1856). A Full Report of the Great Gold Robbery. London: H. Vickers. OCLC 86086166. (subscription required)
  • Evans, D. Mourier (1859). Facts, Failures and Frauds: Revelations, Financial, Mercantile, Criminal. London: Groombridge & Sons. OCLC 898881745.
  • Griffiths, Arthur (1899). Mysteries of Police and Crime. Vol. I. London: Cassell & Co. OCLC 847151446.
  • Hanrahan, David (2011). The First Great Train Robbery. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 978-0-7090-9040-3.
  • Linnane, Fergus (2004). London's Underworld: Three Centuries of Vice and Crime. London: Robson. ISBN 978-1-8610-5742-6.
  • Shore, Heather (2015). London's Criminal Underworlds, c. 1720 – c. 1930: A Social and Cultural History. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan UK. ISBN 978-1-137-31391-1.
  • Storey, Neil (2007). London: Crime, Death and Debauchery. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7509-4624-7.
  • Thomas, Donald (1998). The Victorian Underworld. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-8238-5.

Journals and magazines

  • Cordery, Simon (2013). "The First Great Train Robbery, by David C. Hanrahan". Railroad History (208): 106–107. JSTOR 43524697.
  • Fletcher, John (November 1980). "The First Great Train Robbery". Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society. XXVI (3): 77–81. ISSN 0033-8834.
  • Matlock, Daniel (26 March 2018). "Dr. Smiles and the 'Counterfeit' Gentlemen: Self-Making and Misapplication in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Britain". Victorian Literature and Culture. 46 (1): 83–94. doi:10.1017/S106015031700033X.
  • Robbins, Michael (May 1955). "The Great South-Eastern Bullion Robbery". The Railway Magazine. 101 (649): 315–317.

News sources

  • "The Bullion Robbery". London Evening Standard. 22 May 1855. p. 1.
  • "The Bullion Robbery". The Times. 18 November 1856. p. 11.
  • "The Bullion Robbery". The Times. 11 December 1856. p. 8.
  • "The Bullion Robbery". The Times. 25 December 1856. p. 9.
  • "The Bullion Robbery on the South-Eastern Railway". The Times. 14 January 1857. pp. 7–8.
  • Andrews, Peter (22 June 1975). "The Great Train Robbery". The New York Times. p. 236.
  • Hill, Susan (11 February 2006). "Review: Kept: A Victorian Mystery by DJ Taylor". The Guardian.
  • "Police". The Times. 8 September 1855. p. 9.
  • Richman, Darren (6 December 2015). "No 45: The First Great Train Robbery; Take Two: Movies Not to be Missed". The Independent. p. 10.
  • "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Morning Chronicle. 21 May 1855. p. 1.
  • "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Morning Post. 21 May 1855. p. 1.
  • "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Shipping and Mercantile Gazette. 21 May 1855. p. 5.
  • "Three Hundred Pounds Reward". The Times. 22 May 1855. p. 8.

Websites

  • Clark, Gregory (2020). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  • . Australian Government. Archived from the original on 1 January 2016. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
  • "Edward Agar". Old Bailey Proceedings Online. October 1855. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  • "Edwin Fox Hull and Anchor Windlass". Heritage New Zealand. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  • . British Transport Police. Archived from the original on 25 June 2020. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  • "The Great Gold Bullion Robbery (1960)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 27 February 2021.

great, gold, robbery, took, place, night, 1855, when, routine, shipment, three, boxes, gold, bullion, coins, stolen, from, guard, service, between, london, bridge, station, folkestone, while, being, shipped, paris, robbers, comprised, four, whom, william, test. The Great Gold Robbery took place on the night of 15 May 1855 when a routine shipment of three boxes of gold bullion and coins was stolen from the guard s van of the service between London Bridge station and Folkestone while it was being shipped to Paris The robbers comprised four men two of whom William Tester and James Burgess were employees of the South Eastern Railway SER the company that ran the rail service They were joined by the planners of the crime Edward Agar a career criminal and William Pierce a former employee of the SER who had been dismissed for being a gambler Contemporary news illustration of Agar and Burgess in the guard s van emptying the safes of the gold During transit the gold was held in railway safes which needed two keys to open The men took wax impressions of the keys and made their own copies When they knew a shipment was taking place Tester ensured Burgess was on guard duty and Agar hid in the guard s van They emptied the safes of 224 pounds 102 kg of gold valued at the time at 12 000 approximately equivalent to 1 193 000 in 2021 then left the train at Dover The police and railway authorities had no clues as to who had undertaken the theft and arguments ensued as to whether it had been stolen in England on the ship crossing the English Channel or on the French leg of the journey When Agar was arrested for another crime he asked Pierce to provide Fanny Kay his former girlfriend and child with funds Pierce agreed and then reneged In need of money Kay went to the governor of Newgate Prison and told him who had undertaken the theft Agar was questioned admitted his guilt and testified as a witness Pierce Tester and Burgess were all arrested tried and found guilty of the theft Pierce received a sentence of two years hard labour in England Tester and Burgess were sentenced to penal transportation for 14 years The crime was the subject of a television play in 1960 with Colin Blakely as Pierce The Great Train Robbery a novel by the writer and director Michael Crichton was published in 1975 Crichton adapted his work into a feature film The First Great Train Robbery with Sean Connery portraying Pierce Contents 1 Background 1 1 South Eastern Railway 1 2 Participants 2 Planning and preparation 3 Robbery 15 May 1855 4 Immediate aftermath 5 Discovery investigation and arrest 6 Legal process 7 Later 8 See also 9 Notes and references 9 1 Notes 9 2 References 9 3 Sources 9 3 1 Books 9 3 2 Journals and magazines 9 3 3 News sources 9 3 4 WebsitesBackground EditSouth Eastern Railway Edit South Eastern Railway SER Headquarters of the SER near London Bridge station Route of the SER from London Bridge to Folkestone In 1855 the South Eastern Railway SER ran a boat train service between London Bridge station and Folkestone on the south coast of England It provided part of the main route to Paris at the time with a railway steamer from Folkestone to Boulogne sur Mer northern France and a train to complete the journey direct to Paris 1 The service ran at 8 00 am 11 30 am and 4 30 pm there was also an overnight mail service that left at 8 30 pm and a tidal ferry service 2 Periodically the line would carry shipments of gold from bullion merchants in London to their counterparts in Paris these could be several hundredweights at a time 2 The bullion would be packed into wooden boxes bound with iron hoops and with a wax seal bearing the coat of arms of the bullion dealers in question Abell amp Co Adam Spielmann amp Co and Messrs Bult amp Co The agents who arranged the carriage of the gold including collecting the bullion from the three companies and delivering it to London Bridge were Chaplin amp Co The gold shipments always went on the 8 30 pm train 3 4 At Boulogne the bullion boxes were collected by the French agents Messageries imperiales before being transported by train to the Gare du Nord and then to the Bank of France 5 As a security measure the boxes were weighed when they were loaded onto the guard s van at Folkestone on arrival at Boulogne and then again on arrival in Paris 6 The company s guard s vans were fitted with three patented railway safes provided by Chubb amp Son These were three feet 0 91 m square and made of inch thick 2 5 cm steel Access to the safe was through its lid which was hinged for access the exterior had two keyholes high on the front 2 5 Each of the three safes had the same pair of locks meaning that only two keys were needed to open all three safes 6 Copies of the keys were held separately by SER officials at London Bridge and Folkestone and the company ensured no individual could hold both keys at the same time 5 Participants Edit William Tester James Burgess and Edward Agar in court The originator of the plan was William Pierce a 37 year old former employee of the SER who had been dismissed from its service after it was found that he was a gambler he worked as a ticket printer in a betting shop after leaving the company 6 According to the historian Donald Thomas Pierce was a large faced and rather clumsy man with a taste for loud waistcoats and fancy trousers he was described as imperfectly educated The turf was his true schooling 7 The burglar and safe cracker Edward Agar was just under 40 at the time of the robbery and had been a professional thief since he was 18 He returned to the UK in 1853 after ten years spent in Australia and the US 7 He had 3 000 in government consol bonds and lived in the fashionable area of Shepherd s Bush London 6 a According to Thomas the robbery grew almost entirely from the absolute self confidence and mental ability of Agar 7 Fanny Kay Agar s partner with their child James Burgess was a married thrifty and respectable man who had worked at the SER since it had started running the Folkestone line in 1843 9 He worked for the company as a guard and was often in charge of the trains that carried the bullion 3 As with many railwaymen of the time Burgess s wages had been reduced as the railway boom had passed 9 Fanny Kay aged 23 in 1855 was Agar s partner and lived with him at his house Cambridge Villa in Shepherd s Bush She had previously been an attendant at Tonbridge railway station and had been introduced to Agar by Burgess in 1853 She had a child with Agar and moved in with him in December 1854 10 William Tester was a well educated man who wore a monocle and had a desire to improve his position he was briefly employed after the robbery as a general manager for a Swedish railway company He worked in the traffic department at London Bridge station as the assistant to the superintendent which gave him access to information about the carriage of valuable goods and the guards rota 11 12 James Townshend Saward also known as Jim or Jem the Penman was a barrister and special pleader at the Inner Temple 13 His activities were described by contemporary sources as planning and perfecting schemes of fraud the bold audacity of which is equalled only by their success 14 He was the head of a forgery gang who had been practising cheque fraud for several years 15 Planning and preparation Edit Pierce giving a Chubb key to Agar at the Folkestone railway station After being dismissed from the SER Pierce continued to drink in the pubs and beer shops around London Bridge in which railway employees also drank Over time he picked up detailed information about the gold shipments to Paris 2 while he watched and planned He concluded that a theft would only be possible if he obtained copies of the keys to the safe 16 He relayed his thoughts to Agar before the latter s visit to the US 6 17 at the time Agar declined to take part telling his friend the scheme was impracticable When Agar returned to Britain the two discussed the possibility again and Agar said that it would be impossible to do it unless an impression of the keys could be procured 18 Pierce said he thought he knew how that could be arranged They realised that for any theft to succeed they needed the assistance of a guard travelling in the van with the safes and an official with access to the staff rotas and who knew when the bullion shipments were to be made 19 It was at this stage that Pierce recruited Burgess and Tester to join the group 20 In May 1854 Pierce and Agar travelled to Folkestone to watch the process involved at that end of the line particularly the location and security surrounding the keys They spent so long and were so obvious in their surveillance that they came to the notice of the municipal and railway police As a result Pierce returned to London and left Agar to watch alone 17 21 As part of his intelligence gathering Agar drank in the Rose Inn a public house near the pier where railway staff also drank 22 The pair concluded that one of the keys was carried by the superintendent of the Folkestone end of the line the other was locked in a cabinet at the railway offices on Folkestone pier 23 The Shot Tower Lambeth in 1828 One of the keys held at Folkestone was lost in July 1854 by Captain Mold of the steamship company b The SER sent the safes back to Chubb for the locks to be reconditioned and new keys issued The clerk involved in corresponding with the company was Tester 25 By October Chubb s work had been completed and the keys sent to the SER Tester was able to smuggle them out of the office briefly and met Pierce and Agar in a beer house on Tooley Street London where Agar made an impression of them in green wax Tester was so nervous when he removed the keys that he brought two identical ones with him rather than one for each lock the plotters were still missing one of the keys 26 Agar using the false name of E E Archer used his own funds to send 200 of gold sovereigns on the SER line c The box of bullion labelled E R Archer care of Mr Ledger or Mr Chapman was sent through to Folkestone where Agar would collect it 27 Agar collected the package from the SER office and watched while the company s superintendent retrieved the safe key from a cupboard at the back of the room Knowing where the keys were stored the following weekend Agar and Pierce stayed in nearby Dover and walked to Folkestone When the boat arrived from Boulogne both members of the SER staff left the office to meet it they left the door unlocked when they left Pierce entered the office while Agar waited at the door on lookout Pierce opened the cupboard and took the safe key to Agar who made a wax impression The key was returned and the two men returned to London via Dover 28 Over the following months Pierce and Agar created rough keys from the impressions they had taken In April and May 1855 Agar would travel along the Folkestone route when Burgess was on duty seven or eight trips in total and would hone the keys until they worked smoothly and without effort Pierce and Agar then separately visited the Shot Tower Lambeth where they obtained two long hundredweight 220 lb 100 kg of lead shot They also obtained courier bags which could be strapped under a cloak and carpet bags these were to carry the lead shot onto the train and the gold off it 29 By May 1855 the men were now ready to carry out the robbery and only needed to wait for a day when a gold shipment was taking place Tester altered the staff rosters to ensure Burgess was working on the evening mail service for the month to ensure Agar had access to the safe A signal was arranged whereby either Agar or Pierce would wait outside London Bridge station every day if a shipment was being made Burgess would walk out of the station and wipe his face with a white handkerchief to alert them At the same time Tester would travel to Redhill railway station and await the first stop of the train He would take one of the bags of gold and return to London 29 30 Robbery 15 May 1855 Edit Agar waiting at the London Bridge Station for news of the train On 15 May 1855 while Agar was waiting outside London Bridge station Burgess came out of the station wiped his face with his handkerchief and went back inside Agar notified Pierce and the two men purchased first class tickets for the journey to Folkestone They gave their bags to Burgess for storage in the guard s van during the journey and just before the train was due to leave Pierce took his seat in the cabin and Agar slipped into the guard s van and hid in the corner covered by Burgess s overalls 31 32 As soon as the train departed the station Agar began work Only one of the locks was secured an SER employee later reported that typically only one lock was used and Agar soon had the bullion boxes out of the safe Instead of opening the box through the front he used pincers to pull the rivets out of the iron bands that bound the box and used wedges in the reverse of the box to open the lid without too much visible damage He removed gold bars from inside the box from Abell amp Co d weighed them with the scales he was carrying in the bag and put the same weight of lead shot back into the box He nailed the bars back around the box then resealed a wax seal on the front using a die he had made himself rather than one of the official seals of the bullion dealers He deduced correctly that on the poorly lit station at Folkestone a cursory glance at the seals would not show any change He managed to do this before the train arrived at Redhill which was a 35 minute journey from London Bridge When it arrived at Redhill Agar again hid while Tester was handed the bag containing some of the gold He returned to the SER offices in London as arranged so that he could be seen by colleagues and give himself an alibi for later Pierce took the opportunity to leave his carriage and join his confederates in the guard s van 31 34 35 The other two boxes were examined after the train left Redhill The box from Adam Spielmann amp Co contained hundreds of American gold eagles worth 10 each 31 e these were weighed and lead shot was again left in their place before the box was resealed The final box from Messrs Bult amp Co contained more gold bars These weighed more than the remaining lead they had left and many of the ingots were left behind to ensure there were no major differences in the weights of the boxes when they were later weighed When they replaced the bands on the final box it was damaged but they repaired it as best they could and replaced it in the safe The three men then cleared away the mess they had made mostly splinters and drops of wax and prepared themselves by strapping on the courier bags beneath their cloaks When the train arrived in Folkestone at about 10 30 pm Pierce and Agar hid in the van while the safes were removed by staff They then left the van and entered the main part of the train passing through until they reached first class where they sat until it arrived in Dover 31 36 37 When the train reached Dover Pierce and Agar alighted collected their carpet bags full of gold from the guard s van then went to a nearby hotel for supper Agar threw the keys and tools into the sea before the two men returned to London on the 2 00 am train which arrived at around 5 00 am 38 In total they had stolen 224 pounds 102 kg of gold valued at the time at 12 000 39 f Immediate aftermath Edit 300 reward notice published in several newspapers When the steamer carrying the gold arrived in Boulogne one of the crew saw that the bullion boxes were damaged but as staff at Folkestone had not mentioned it saw no cause for concern 40 The boxes were weighed on arrival at Boulogne where the box from Abell was found to be 40 pounds 18 kg lighter than it had been in London whereas the other boxes both weighed more They were transported to Paris where they were weighed again with the same results as at Boulogne When they were opened the lead shot was found and the news relayed back to London 41 42 When the working day began on 16 May Pierce and Agar went to a money changer s shop with some of the American eagles and obtained 213 for them at a second such shop they exchanged 200 of them to get a cheque for just over 203 40 g The three bullion merchants demanded recompense for the lost gold most of Abell s gold was insured through the SER but the company denied any culpability claiming that the robbery must have taken in place in France The French authorities pointed out that as the weights of the boxes in France both matched and differed from that in England it must have occurred in the UK both the French and British companies stated that the crime was an impossibility according to Thomas 42 43 44 h Newspapers reported that It is supposed that so well planned a scheme could not have been executed in the rapid passage by railway from London to Folkestone 46 Burgess was examined but not deemed a suspect because of his 14 years of service to the company Tester had been seen at the SER offices while the train was still en route to Folkestone so was also discounted as a potential thief 47 A reward of 300 was soon advertised in several newspapers for information regarding the case 48 i j Discovery investigation and arrest Edit Agar selling part of the gold to Saward Pierce and Agar began to melt down the bars to create new smaller bars of 100 ounces 2 8 kg although they briefly set fire to the floor of Cambridge Villa when one of the crucibles cracked spilling molten gold Relations between Agar and Kay deteriorated around this time and he moved out of their house to stay with Pierce while they continued to process and dispose of the bullion 52 2 500 of bullion was sold to Saward acting as a fence and the proceeds split evenly between Agar Pierce Tester and Burgess 42 k Burgess invested his earnings in Turkish bonds and shares in the brewing company Reid amp Co Pierce opened a betting shop near Covent Garden telling friends he had won the capital by betting on Saucebox in the St Leger Stakes horse race at long odds 42 47 Tester put his money into Spanish Active bonds That September he left the SER and became the general manager of a Swedish railway company 53 54 At around the time Agar had separated from Kay he met Emily Campbell a 19 year old prostitute and the two began a relationship Campbell s pimp William Humphreys took umbrage at the loss of her earnings To overcome any problems Agar lent Humphreys 235 When he went to collect the repaid money he was arrested as one of Humphreys associates passed him a bag of coins Police stated that this was the proceeds of a cheque fraud in which he was involved and he was charged accordingly Agar stated he knew nothing of the fraud and he was trying to collect the money he had lent 44 55 Appearing at the Old Bailey in September 1855 on the charge of feloniously forging and uttering an order for the payment of 700L 700 with intend to defraud l Agar was found guilty and sentenced to penal transportation for life 56 57 Awaiting transportation in Pentonville Prison Agar arranged for his solicitor Thomas Wontner to use the 3 000 Agar had in his bank account and give it to Pierce with instructions that it should be used to support Kay and their child Pierce agreed then reneged around mid 1856 Desperate for money she went to see John Weatherhead the governor of Newgate Prison and told him that she knew who was involved in the SER bullion robbery An investigation was undertaken at Cambridge Villa police found evidence that corroborated Kay s story including the burnt floorboards small specks of gold in the fireplace and under the floorboards and evidence that the fireplace had been used at a very high temperature 58 59 source The Great Gold Robbery in The Chronicles of Newgate Agar was interviewed in October 1856 while still in Pentonville by John Rees the company solicitor for the SER Agar refused to answer any questions and so Rees returned around two weeks later and tried again In the interim Agar had heard that Pierce had not kept to his word and so angered by the deceit of his erstwhile partner he turned Queen s evidence and gave Rees the full details of the crime Pierce and Burgess were arrested on 5 November As Tester was living in Sweden he could not be arrested but he was informed that the police wanted to interview him 60 61 Legal process Edit Agar under examination at the Old Bailey In November and December 1856 hearings took place at the Mansion House presided over by the Lord Mayor of London in his role as the Chief Magistrate of the City of London m For the first two hearings Agar was not present but was brought to the court on the third day When questioned he confirmed the story he had given to the police and identified pieces of evidence that had been gathered 63 64 On 10 December Tester appeared in court having been dismissed from his position with the Swedish company 65 66 When the Lord Mayor gave his decision on 24 December that the three men were to stand trial for the robbery Pierce said I have nothing at all to say I reserve my defence Burgess and Tester both stated I am not guilty 67 68 The trial took place at the Old Bailey between 13 and 15 January 1857 69 and received wide coverage in newspapers across Britain 70 Burgess Tester and Pierce all pleaded not guilty Agar gave evidence against his former colleagues again and told the court he was in Thomas s words a self confessed professional criminal who had not made an honest living since the age of eighteen 71 Witnesses included the locksmith John Chubb the bullion dealers transportation agents SER staff the station staff of London Bridge and Folkestone a customs officer from Boulogne railway police taverners and hotel keepers All corroborated Agar s story that the four men knew each other and were present together at various stages of the planning and execution of the crime 72 It took the jury ten minutes to decide on the guilt of the three men Pierce of larceny Burgess and Tester of larceny as a servant 73 74 The judge Sir Samuel Martin showed what the journalist Fergus Linnane calls a grudging admiration for Agar during his summing up The man Agar is a man who is as bad I dare say as bad can be but that he is a man of most extraordinary ability no person who heard him examined can for a moment deny Something has been said of the romance connected with that man s character but let those who fancy that there is anything great in it consider his fate It is obvious that he is a man of extraordinary talent that he gave to this and perhaps to many other robberies an amount of care and perseverance one tenth of which devoted to honest pursuits must have raised him to a respectable station in life and considering the commercial activity of this country during the last twenty years would probably have enabled him to realise a large fortune 75 Burgess and Tester were both sentenced to penal transportation for 14 years Pierce as he was not a member of SER staff was given the lighter sentence of two years hard labour in England three months of which would be in solitary confinement 76 Later Edit The interior of the Edwin Fox listed by Heritage New Zealand in 1999 77 Tester and Burgess were transported on board the Edwin Fox convict ship on 26 August 1858 the destination was the Swan River Colony in Western Australia Burgess was given a ticket of leave in December 1859 and a conditional pardon in March 1862 n Tester received his ticket of leave in July 1859 and a conditional pardon in October 1861 He left Australia in 1863 Agar remained in England for a little longer he is known to have been held in Portland Prison in February 1857 before being transported to Australia on 23 September 1857 He was given his ticket of leave in September 1860 and a conditional pardon in September 1867 He left Australia to travel to Colombo in modern day Sri Lanka in 1869 78 An account of the trial was published in 1857 with illustrations by Percy Cruikshank the eldest son of Isaac Robert Cruikshank 81 The history of the robbery can be found in The First Great Train Robbery written by David C Hanrahan in 2011 82 In the May 1955 issue of The Railway Magazine the railway historian Michael Robbins wrote an article on the robbery 83 in November 1980 the Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society carried an account written by the historian John Fletcher 84 On 25 December 1960 the television anthology series Armchair Theatre dramatised the crime under the title The Great Gold Bullion Robbery Adapted by Malcolm Hulke and Eric Paice from a play by the lawyer Gerald Sparrow and directed by John Llewellyn Moxey it starred Colin Blakely as Pierce James Booth as Agar Henry McGee as Tester and Leslie Weston as Burgess 85 The writer and director Michael Crichton produced his novel The Great Train Robbery in 1975 86 his introduction reads The Great Train Robbery was not only shocking and appalling but also daring audacious and masterful 87 A feature film based on the novel The First Great Train Robbery 1978 presents a highly fictionalised version of the event portraying Pierce played by Sean Connery as a gentleman master criminal who eventually escapes from the police 88 The robbery also featured as one of the themes in the 2006 mystery novel Kept by D J Taylor 89 See also EditList of heists in the United Kingdom Train robberyNotes and references EditNotes Edit 3 000 in 1853 equates to approximately 323 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 Mold was dismissed by the company for this error so seriously was it taken 24 200 in 1854 equates to approximately equivalent to 20 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 Agar in his testimony refers to four gold bars 33 David Hanrahan in his history of the robbery states it was six bars 34 10 in 1855 equates to approximately 145 in 2023 according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 12 000 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to 1 193 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 200 in 1855 equates to approximately 22 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on the Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 The journalist Fergus Linnane states that 200 at the time was enough to buy a suburban villa 31 An additional pointer to the French authorities was that the lead pellets were soft when bitten British lead was known to be slightly softer than the French equivalent 45 300 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to 30 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 This included in The Times 49 The Morning Chronicle 48 The Morning Post 50 and The Shipping and Mercantile Gazette 51 2 500 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to 249 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 700 in 1855 equates to approximately equivalent to 70 000 in 2021 according to calculations based on Consumer Price Index measure of inflation 8 The hearings were spread over several days 6 12 13 17 and 24 November and 2 10 13 and 20 December 1856 and judgement on 24 December They were held in front of two Lord Mayors Sir David Salomons and his successor Thomas Quested Finnis 62 A ticket of leave was given to convicts for good behaviour It allowed them to live independently of the prison system and take employment but only within a limited geographical area Their behaviour was still scrutinised and the ticket could be withdrawn if the conditions were infringed A conditional pardon gave freedom to a convict but not the permission to return to the UK 78 79 80 References Edit Fletcher 1980 p 77 a b c d Thomas 1998 p 209 a b Griffiths 1899 p 389 Hanrahan 2011 pp 10 11 61 a b c Thomas 1998 p 210 a b c d e Linnane 2004 p 84 a b c Thomas 1998 p 207 a b c d e f g h Clark 2020 a b Thomas 1998 p 211 Evans 1859 p 238 The Great Gold Robbery 1855 British Transport Police Linnane 2004 p 85 Thomas 1998 p 211 Storey 2007 p 23 Shore 2015 p 127 The Bankers Magazine and Journal of the Money Market 1857 p 108 Shore 2015 p 128 Storey 2007 p 23 a b Fletcher 1980 p 78 Cruikshank 1856 pp 16 17 Griffiths 1899 p 390 Hanrahan 2011 p 50 Robbins 1955 p 316 Matlock 2018 p 87 Thomas 1998 p 213 Hanrahan 2011 p 55 Thomas 1998 pp 213 214 Hanrahan 2011 p 56 Evans 1859 p 488 Hanrahan 2011 pp 58 59 a b Thomas 1998 p 217 Hanrahan 2011 pp 61 63 a b c d e Linnane 2004 p 87 Hanrahan 2011 pp 65 66 Cruikshank 1856 p 19 a b Hanrahan 2011 p 66 Thomas 1998 pp 218 219 Hanrahan 2011 pp 66 67 Thomas 1998 p 220 Hanrahan 2011 pp 67 70 Cruikshank 1856 p 3 a b Thomas 1998 p 222 Thomas 1998 pp 222 222 a b c d The Times 14 January 1857 p 7 Thomas 1998 pp 222 223 a b Linnane 2004 p 88 Hanrahan 2011 p 18 The Bullion Robbery London Evening Standard p 1 a b Thomas 1998 pp 224 225 a b Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Morning Chronicle p 1 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Times p 8 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Morning Post p 1 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Shipping and Mercantile Gazette p 5 Hanrahan 2011 pp 73 75 The Times 14 January 1857 p 8 Hanrahan 2011 pp 76 77 Thomas 1998 pp 225 226 Police The Times p 9 Edward Agar Old Bailey Proceedings Online Hanrahan 2011 pp 80 81 Thomas 1998 pp 226 227 Hanrahan 2011 pp 81 82 Linnane 2004 p 89 Hanrahan 2011 pp 84 87 91 92 98 101 107 110 111 Hanrahan 2011 pp 92 95 The Times 18 November 1856 p 11 Hanrahan 2011 pp 105 107 The Times 11 December 1856 p 8 The Times 25 December 1856 p 9 Hanrahan 2011 pp 111 112 Robbins 1955 p 317 Shore 2015 p 121 Thomas 1998 p 227 Hanrahan 2011 pp 141 151 Hanrahan 2011 p 189 Cruikshank 1856 p 45 Cruikshank 1856 p 46 Hanrahan 2011 p 191 Edwin Fox Hull and Anchor Windlass Heritage New Zealand a b Hanrahan 2011 p 199 Convicts and the British colonies in Australia Australian Government Bradley Hirst 2008 p 117 Hanrahan 2011 p 203 Cordery 2013 pp 106 107 Robbins 1955 pp 315 317 Fletcher 1980 pp 77 81 The Great Gold Bullion Robbery 1960 British Film Institute Andrews 1975 p 236 Crichton 1995 p xvii Richman 2015 p 10 Hill 2006 Sources Edit Books Edit The Great Banking Forgeries The Bankers Magazine and Journal of the Money Market London Richard Groombridge XVII 1857 Bradley Hirst John 2008 Freedom on the Fatal Shore Australia s First Colony Melbourne Victoria Black Inc ISBN 978 1 86395 207 1 Crichton Michael 1995 The Great Train Robbery London Arrow ISBN 978 0 0994 8241 3 Cruikshank Percy 1856 A Full Report of the Great Gold Robbery London H Vickers OCLC 86086166 subscription required Evans D Mourier 1859 Facts Failures and Frauds Revelations Financial Mercantile Criminal London Groombridge amp Sons OCLC 898881745 Griffiths Arthur 1899 Mysteries of Police and Crime Vol I London Cassell amp Co OCLC 847151446 Hanrahan David 2011 The First Great Train Robbery London Robert Hale ISBN 978 0 7090 9040 3 Linnane Fergus 2004 London s Underworld Three Centuries of Vice and Crime London Robson ISBN 978 1 8610 5742 6 Shore Heather 2015 London s Criminal Underworlds c 1720 c 1930 A Social and Cultural History Basingstoke Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 978 1 137 31391 1 Storey Neil 2007 London Crime Death and Debauchery Stroud Gloucestershire Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 7509 4624 7 Thomas Donald 1998 The Victorian Underworld New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 8238 5 Journals and magazines Edit Cordery Simon 2013 The First Great Train Robbery by David C Hanrahan Railroad History 208 106 107 JSTOR 43524697 Fletcher John November 1980 The First Great Train Robbery Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society XXVI 3 77 81 ISSN 0033 8834 Matlock Daniel 26 March 2018 Dr Smiles and the Counterfeit Gentlemen Self Making and Misapplication in Mid Nineteenth Century Britain Victorian Literature and Culture 46 1 83 94 doi 10 1017 S106015031700033X Robbins Michael May 1955 The Great South Eastern Bullion Robbery The Railway Magazine 101 649 315 317 News sources Edit The Bullion Robbery London Evening Standard 22 May 1855 p 1 The Bullion Robbery The Times 18 November 1856 p 11 The Bullion Robbery The Times 11 December 1856 p 8 The Bullion Robbery The Times 25 December 1856 p 9 The Bullion Robbery on the South Eastern Railway The Times 14 January 1857 pp 7 8 Andrews Peter 22 June 1975 The Great Train Robbery The New York Times p 236 Hill Susan 11 February 2006 Review Kept A Victorian Mystery by DJ Taylor The Guardian Police The Times 8 September 1855 p 9 Richman Darren 6 December 2015 No 45 The First Great Train Robbery Take Two Movies Not to be Missed The Independent p 10 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Morning Chronicle 21 May 1855 p 1 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Morning Post 21 May 1855 p 1 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Shipping and Mercantile Gazette 21 May 1855 p 5 Three Hundred Pounds Reward The Times 22 May 1855 p 8 Websites Edit Clark Gregory 2020 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 4 June 2020 Convicts and the British colonies in Australia Australian Government Archived from the original on 1 January 2016 Retrieved 3 January 2017 Edward Agar Old Bailey Proceedings Online October 1855 Retrieved 19 June 2020 Edwin Fox Hull and Anchor Windlass Heritage New Zealand Retrieved 3 January 2023 The Great Gold Robbery 1855 British Transport Police Archived from the original on 25 June 2020 Retrieved 28 May 2020 The Great Gold Bullion Robbery 1960 British Film Institute Retrieved 27 February 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Great Gold Robbery amp oldid 1154864331, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.