Rare pamphlet includes roistering criminal’s surprisingly enlightened attitude to the advances made to him by an innkeeper’s son

An “incredibly rare” deathbed confession from an 18th-century highwayman, written just before he was “hung in chains” for robbing the Yarmouth Mail and detailing his enlightened response to a failed gay seduction, has been acquired by Horsham Museum.

The Life of Thomas Munn, alias, the Gentleman Brick-Maker, alias, Tom the Smuggler runs to 24 pages and was printed in 1750. It is part of the once-popular genre of deathbed confessions, a precursor of true crime, and purports to be an autobiography handed by Munn to the Yarmouth gaoler on the morning of his execution on 6 April 1750.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Manston health concerns raised with Home Office weeks before outbreak

Local officials warned of need to improve infection control measures shortly before…

New drug could slow tumour regrowth in inoperable bowel cancer

Adavosertib found to delay tumour growth in some patients in clinical trial,…

War in Ukraine defining new world order, says thinktank

Poll reveals west more united but gulf growing with countries such as…