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  • Seller image for Pierce Egan's Account of the Trial of John Thurtell and Joseph Hunt (for the Murder of William Weare). With an Appendix, disclosing some extraordinary facts, exclusively in the possession of the editor. With portraits, and many other illustrative engravings. for sale by Jarndyce, The 19th Century Booksellers

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    (iv), (106)pp. Front. & wood engraved plates. Recollections of John Thurtell. by Pierce Egan, being an appendix to his account of the trial is separately paginated. Front. of the execution. (ii), 44pp. Maroon cloth, sl.marked. The Appendix is still separately paged.

  • Seller image for Pierce Egan's Account of the Trial of John Thurtell and Joseph Hunt for sale by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA  ILAB

    Trial; Egan, Pierce, Reporter; Thurtell & Hunt

    Publication Date: 1824

    Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ABAA ESA ILAB

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    US$ 250.00

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    The Fatal Consequences of Sports Betting [Trial]. Thurtell, John [1794-1824] & Joseph Hunt [d.1825?], Defendants. Egan, Pierce [1772-1849], Reporter. Pierce Egan's Account of the Trial of John Thurtell and Joseph Hunt. With an Appendix, Disclosing Some Extraordinary Facts, Exclusively in the Possession of the Editor. With Portraits, And Many Other Illustrative Engravings. London: Knight & Lacey, Publishers, 1824. [iv], 105, [1] pp. With an engraved portrait frontispiece (of Thurtell, Hunt and William Probert) and 6 unnumbered full-page woodcuts, as called for. [Bound with] Egan, Pierce. Recollections of John Thurtell, Who was Executed at Hertford on Friday, The 9th of January, 1824.Being an Appendix to His Account of the Trial, Which May Now be Had, Price 2s. London: Knight & Lacey, Publishers, 1824. [iv], 44 pp. With a woodcut frontispiece depicting Thurtell's execution. Octavo (8-1/2" x 5"; 21.4 x 12.7 cm). Contemporary three-quarter calf over marbled boards, gilt fillets and lettering piece to spine. Some rubbing to exterior, light wear to extremities, front joint cracked, spine varnished, corners bumped, rear hinge cracked. Light toning to interior, occasional light foxing and soiling, unobtrusive faint dampstaining to first three leaves of Account. A good copy. $250. * Only editions. John Thurtell, an unlucky gambler, was deeply in debt to the bookmaker William Weare. Deciding to take revenge, Thurtell, along with his friends Joseph Hunt and William Probert, murdered Weare in a grisly manner and tossed his body into a pond. Thurtell tried to escape conviction. He was hanged. Hunt confessed his involvement and stated that Thurtell was the killer. He was sent to the penal colony in Botany Bay, Australia. Charges against Probert were dropped in exchange for his wife's testimony, which minimized his role in the crime. Our account of the trial and its aftermath was produced by Pierce Egan, a popular journalist and sportswriter. Thurtell himself was an admirer--the chance to read Egan's coverage of a recent prizefight was purportedly among his final wishes. Recollections was issued separately as the appendix which is referenced on the title page of Account.

  • Trial; Fauntleroy, Henry; Egan, Pierce

    Publication Date: 1824

    Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ABAA ESA ILAB

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    London: Knight and Lacey, Publishers, [1824] (illustrator). London: Knight and Lacey, Publishers, [1824]. The Trial and Execution of Henry Fauntleroy: A Landmark Case in British Financial History [Trial] Fauntleroy, Henry [1785-1824], Defendant. Egan, Pierce [1772-1849], Reporter. Pierce Egan's Account of the Trial of Mr.Fauntleroy, For Forgery, At the Session's-House, In the Old Bailey, On Saturday, The 30th of October, 1824, Before Mr.Justice Park and Mr.Baron Garrow. London: Knight and Lacey, Publishers, [1824]. Octavo (8-1/4" x 5-1/4"). 67, [1] pp. Disbound stab-stitched pamphlet. Light soiling and edgewear; moderate toning to text. Minor chips and tears to a few leaf margins, not affecting text. Early ownership signature and "5" to head of title page. A very good copy. $500. * Only edition. Henry Fauntleroy was a prominent English banker whose conviction for forgery became a cause celebre. Though he admitted to the acts, he maintained they were committed solely to sustain his firm's credit. Despite the testimony of numerous merchants to his character and multiple appeals for clemency, he was executed in November 1824. He remains one of the last individuals in Great Britain to be hanged for forgery before it ceased to be a capital offense in 1836. The ownership inscription on the title page belongs to "Thos. Fisher / 3 Union Street / Bath," likely Thomas Fisher (1787-1863), a mid-nineteenth-century British solicitor. British Museum Catalogue (Compact Edition) 9:70.