<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<p>Did Not Go to His Wife in Nova Scotia but Made a Tour
Committing Various Depredations—Is Seen in Portland,
Maine—Is Heard of at Boston and New York and Then at
New Haven Where He Robbed a Hotel—Arrest and Escape,
Recapture and Conviction.</p>
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After having made his appearance in
different parts of Nova Scotia, he called at
a certain house one morning, on a bye-road,
and ordered breakfast, and asked for a towel also,
and a piece of soap that he might wash at a small
brook that was near the house. The woman of the
house, and a maid, were the only persons in the
house at the time. Smith left a large bundle, which
he carried, on a chest which was standing in the
room, and went out to wash. The bundle presented
rather a singular appearance, and attracted the
young woman’s notice, so that she said to the other:
“I wonder what he has in that bundle. If you will
keep watch at the window while he is washing at
the brook, I will open and see what is in it.” They
did so and found a great number of watches, of
which they counted fifteen, with many other
valuable articles.</p>
<p>She tied up the bundle again, and placed it where
he had left it and said, “This man has stolen these
watches.” When he came in, he handed the towel
to the young woman, and said, “There were just
fifteen watches, were there?” and with such an
expression of countenance, that she could not refrain
from answering, “Yes.” “But,” said he, “you
were mistaken about my stealing them, for I came
honestly by them.” Upon which the young woman
instantly recognized him to be Henry More Smith,
and concluded that he was collecting his “hidden
treasure,” which he had deposited while he was in
Roden.</p>
<p>This information I received from Mrs. Beckwith,
a respectable lady from Nova Scotia, who resided
at the time in that neighborhood, who also said it
was not known that he had ever seen his wife at
that time, from the time of his release from
confinement. The next account I heard of him
stated that he had been seen on board of a plaster
vessel at Eastport, but he was not known to have
been on shore during the time she remained there.
He employed himself while on board engraving a
number of small articles, some of which he made
presents of to young ladies who chanced to come
on board.</p>
<p>He was next seen at Portland, by a gentleman who
had known him at Kingston; nothing, however,
transpired there concerning him, only that he was
travelling with considerable weight of baggage
through the State of Maine, which gave rise to the
following ludicrous story, which I saw published
at Eastport, of a Mysterious Stranger travelling in
a stage. One cold and stormy night, the bar-room
of an hotel was filled with sturdy farmers
surrounding a cheerful fire, and discussing the
affairs of state over a mug of flip. The night having
been tremendously stormy and wet, the wind
whistling all around the house, and making every
door and window rattle, the landlord expressed
much fear for the safety of the stage coach; but
suddenly the sound of a distant stage-horn
announced the approach of the coach and removed
the landlord’s anxiety. He replenished the fire,
that the approaching travellers might have as warm
a retreat as possible from the unusual inclemency
of the night.</p>
<p>Some time passed, and yet the expected coach did
not come up. The landlord’s fears grew up anew,
and with an expression of concern he put the
question around, “Did not some of you hear a
horn?” and added, “I have expected the stage a
long time, and I thought that a few minutes ago I
heard the horn near at hand; but I fear that
something has happened in the gale that has caused
it to be thus belated.” “I thought I heard the
stage-horn some time ago,” answered the arch
young farmer Hopkins; “but then you must know
that ghosts and witches are very busy on such nights
as this, and what kind of pranks they may cut up
we cannot tell. You know the old adage,—“Busy
as the devil in a gale of wind.” Now who knows
but they may have——” Here he was interrupted
by the sudden opening of the door, accompanied by
a violent gust of wind and the dashing of rain, when
in rushed from the fury of the storm, drenched with
wet from head to foot, a tall stranger, dressed in a
fur cap and shaggy great coat.</p>
<p>From an impulse of politeness and respect, not
unmingled with fear, all arose on his entrance,—the
expression “The devil in a gale of wind,” rushing
upon their minds with a signification to which
a profound silence gave expressive utterance. The
stranger noticed their reserved yet voluntary
respect with a slight nod, and proceeded to disencumber
himself of his wet clothes and warm his
fingers by the fire. By this time the driver entered
bearing the baggage of his passenger. “The worst
storm I was ever troubled with blowing right in my
teeth, and I guess the gentleman there found it the
same.” Here a low whisper ensued between the
driver and the landlord, from which an unconnected
word or phrase dropped upon the ear of the
inmates. “Don’t know,—came in the,—as rich
as a mine,” &c. Upon this information the landlord
immediately took his wet garments and hung
them carefully before the fire. “I hope that your
wetting will not injure your health, sir.” “I
hardly think it will, my good friend; I am no child
to catch cold from a ducking.” “Shall I show you
a room, sir?” said the landlord. “We can let you
have as good a room and as comfortable a supper as
any in the country.”</p>
<p>The stranger was immediately conducted into a
handsome parlor, in which blazed a cheerful fire;
and in a short time a smoking supper was placed on
the board. After supper was over, he called the
landlord into his room, and sent for his trunk. “I
like your accommodations,” accosting the landlord,
“and if you like my proposals equally well, I will
be your guest for some time, though I know not
how long. Nay, I shall stay at any price you please—but
remember, I must have my rooms to myself,
and they must not be entered without my leave;
and whatever I do, no questions to be asked. Do
you consent to these terms?” “I do sir,” replied
the landlord, “and you shall not have cause to
complain of your treatment.” “Very well,”
rejoined the stranger, “then the agreement is
completed. You may go now.” “Yes, sir,”
replied the landlord, “but what may I call your
name, sir?” “Beware, you have broken the
bargain already,” replied the stranger. “I forgive
you for this once only; now ask no more questions,
or you will certainly drive me from your house.”</p>
<p>After this the landlord returned to his bar-room,
from which the merry farmers had not yet withdrawn,
but were endeavoring to penetrate the
mystery that hung around the stranger. “Well,
landlord,” said the arch Hopkins, “what do you
make him out to be?” “That is a question I dare
hardly answer. He is a gentleman, for he does not
grudge his money.” “I would not think he
should,” replied Hopkins, shaking his head
mysteriously. “And why not?” exclaimed several
of the company. “Ah, just as I thought,” returned
Hopkins, with another shake of the head and significant
look at the landlord. “What, in the name of
all that’s silly, is the matter with you, Hopkins?”
exclaimed the landlord. “What on earth can you
know?” “I know what I know,” was his reply.</p>
<p>“Rather doubtful, that,” rejoined the landlord.</p>
<p>“You doubt it,” returned Hopkins, rather warmly;
“then I will tell you what I think him to be;
he is nothing more or less than a pirate; and
you will all be murdered in your beds, Smith,
(which was the landlord’s name,) you and your
whole family, before morning. Now what think
you of your guest?”</p>
<p>All the company stood aghast, and stared at each
other in silence for some time, until the landlord
again ventured to interrupt the silence by asking
Hopkins “How do you know all that?” Hopkins
answered, in rather a silly manner, “I guessed
at it,” which did away with the effect produced
by his previous assertions; and the landlord
dismissing his fears, exclaimed, “As long as
he pays well, be he man or devil, he shall stay here.”
“A praiseworthy conclusion,” proceeded from a
voice at the back part of the room, and at that instant
the mysterious stranger stood before them. All
started to their feet, seized their hats and waited to
ask no questions, nor make additional comments,
but went home and told their wives of Smith’s guest,
and Hopkins’ opinion of his character.</p>
<p>Every woman fastened her door that night with
suspicious care, and the mysterious stranger, and
the delineation of his real character by Hopkins,
became a subject of general conversation and comment
throughout the village, and gradually became
the received opinion among all the settlers, so that
they set down the mysterious stranger for what
Hopkins guessed him to be, and concluded that the
articles which composed his baggage could not have
been obtained honestly.</p>
<p>The stranger, finding now the conversation
turned upon him, did not think it prudent to protract
his stay in this place, and proceeding to Boston
in the coach, was known from that time by the name
of Maitland. He reached Boston about the 1st of
November, where it was supposed he must have, in
some way, disposed of much of his treasures.
From thence he proceeded for New York; on the
7th November arrived at New Haven in the Boston
stage coach, by the way of New London, with a
large trunk full of clothing, a small portable desk,
and money in his pockets. He was dressed in a
handsome frock coat, with breeches, and a pair of
top boots, and remained at the steamboat hotel
several days. While he remained there, he always
ate his meals alone, and preferred being alone in
different parts of the hotel at different times, every
part of which he had an opportunity of becoming
acquainted with, while he remained waiting for the
arrival of the steamer from New York.</p>
<p>The hotel was then kept by Mr. Henry Butler;
and, as it afterwards appeared, the traveller
found his way by means of keys, into Mr.
Butler’s desk and sideboards, as well as every
part of the house. He left New Haven in the
steamboat at 5 a.m. on the 10th November, 1815.
After his departure from New Haven, Mr. Butler’s
servants discovered that their whole quantity of
silver spoons, to the number of four or five dozen,
which had been carefully put away in a side-board
was missing, and not to be found on the premises;
and it was found, upon further search by Mr. Butler,
that a watch and several other articles, with money
from the desk, had sympathetically decamped with
the spoons. Mr. Butler imagined that the theft
must be chargeable on some lodger in the hotel,
and immediately fixed his suspicions upon Smith,
whose appearance and movements about the house
furnished suspicions too strong to pass unnoticed.</p>
<p>Mr. Butler, without loss of time, set out for
New York, and arriving there before the boat that
carried the adventurer, he furnished himself with
proper authority, and boarded the boat in the
stream. After Mr. Butler had made some enquiries
of Captain Bunker, who could not identify the
traveller among all his passengers, Smith made his
appearance from some part of the engine room and
was immediately ordered by Mr. Butler to open his
trunk, with which he complied unhesitatingly; but
the trunk did not disclose the expected booty.
There was, however, in the trunk a very neat
portable writing desk, which he refused to open,
and Mr. Butler could not find out how it was
fastened. However, he called for an axe to split it
open, upon which Smith said, “I will show you,”
and, touching a spring, the lid flew open. The
desk contained a set of neat engraving tools, with
old silver rings and jewelry, amongst which
Mr. Butler perceived a small ear-ring, which he
supposed belonged to a young lady that had slept
in his house, and laid her ear-rings on a stand at
the head of her bed, which were missing the next
morning. After her departure one of the rings
was found at the door of the hotel. Upon the
evidence of this single ear-ring, he was arrested and
put into the Bridewell in the city of New York.</p>
<p>The keeper of the Bridewell at that time was
Archimial Allen, an old friend of mine, and a man
of respectable character. On my visit to New York
afterwards, I called on Mr. Allen, and enquired the
particulars concerning W. H. Newman, (for this
was the name he had assumed then) while in his
custody. He informed me that when he was put
in he behaved for some time very well; that he
offered him a book; but he could neither read nor
write a word. He soon began to complain of being
sick from confinement, raised blood, and seemed so
ill that a doctor attended him, but could not tell
what was the matter with him. However, he kept
up the farce of being ill until he was removed from
Bridewell to New Haven, there to take his trial at
the Supreme court in January.</p>
<p>His change of situation had the effect, as it would
seem, of restoring his health, which brought along
with it that display of his ingenuity which the
peculiarity of his new situation seemed to call forth.
During the period of his confinement at New Haven,
he amused himself by carving two images—one
representing himself, and the other Butler, in the
attitude of fighting. And so mechanically had he
adjusted this production of his genius, that he
would actually cause them to fight, and make the
image representing himself knock down that of
Butler, to the wonder and amusement of many that
came to see him. By his insinuating manner and
captivating address, he not only drew forth the
sympathies of those who came to visit him, but even
gained so far upon their credulity, as to induce a
belief that he was innocent of the crime with which
he was charged.</p>
<p>The lapse of a few days, however, made
impressions of a different nature. The January
Court term drew nigh, at which our prisoner was
to receive his trial, but on the very eve of his trial,
and after the Court had been summoned, he, by the
power of a mind which seldom failed him in the
hour of emergency, contrived and effected his
escape in the following curious and singular
manner. And here it will be necessary to give
some description of the prison, with the situation
of the apartments, which the writer was himself, by
the politeness of the keeper, permitted to survey.
There was a wide hall leading from the front of
the County House, and from this hall, two separate
prisons were entered by their respective doors;
between these doors a timber partition crossed the
hall, having in it a door also, to allow an entrance
to the inner prison. The object in having this
partition, was to prevent any intercourse between
the two prison doors, and it was so placed as to leave
a distance of about two feet on each side between
it and the prison doors respectively. Newman,
(for this it will be remembered is the name by
which our prisoner is now known); was confined
in the inner prison.</p>
<p>The doors of the prison opened by shoving
inwards, and when shut were secured by two strong
bolts, which entered into stone posts, with clasps
lapped over a staple, to which were fixed strong
padlocks. These padlocks, our prisoner, by some
means, managed to open or remove, so that he
could open the door at pleasure, and fix the padlocks
again in so geniously, that it could not be detected
from their appearance. On the night of the 12th
January, at the usual time of feeding the prisoners,
Newman, availing himself of these adjustments,
opened his door, came out, and replacing the locks,
took his stand behind the door of the partition,
which, when open, would conceal him from
observation. The prisoners in the other apartments
received their supply first, and the instant when
the servant was proceeding from the door to go and
bring Newman’s supper, he stepped through the
partition door, which had been first opened and
not shut again, and followed the servant softly
through the hall to the front door, and walked away
undiscovered! When the servant returned with
his supper to the wicket, she called him, but receiving
no answer, placed his supper inside of the
wicket, saying, “you may take it or leave it; I am
not going to wait here all night.” She then
secured the outer door, and so the matter rested till
the morning.</p>
<p>The next morning, finding that the prisoner had
not taken his supper, the servant observed to the
keeper, that she feared Newman was dead, for he
had not taken his supper; and she called him, but
could not hear or see anything of him. Upon this,
the keeper came with his keys to unlock the door,
and to his utter astonishment, found both locks
broken and the prison empty. The keeper made
known the matter to the sheriff, and on the 13th,
the day subsequent to his escape, the following
notice was inserted in the Connecticut Journal:</p>
<p class='c013'>“<span class='sc'>Beware of a Villain!</span>—One of the most
accomplished villains that disgraces our country,
broke from the jail in this city on Friday evening
last, between the hours of five and six o’clock, and
succeeded in making his escape. The fellow calls
himself Newman, and was bound over for trial at
the sitting of the next Supreme Court, on the charge
of burglary, having robbed the house of Mr. Butler,
of plate, money, etc. He is supposed to be an
Englishman, and is undoubtedly a most profound
adept in the arts of knavery and deception. He
speaks the English and French languages fluently,
and can play off the air of a genteel Frenchman with
the most imposing gravity. He is of middling
stature, slender and active, and appears to possess
an astonishing variety of genius. He is sick or well,
grave or gay, silent or loquacious, and can fence,
box, fight, run, sing, dance, play, whistle, or talk,
as occasion suits. He amused himself while in
prison, by making and managing a puppet show,
which he performed apparently with such means as
to excite the wonder of the credulous, having a
piece of an old horse-shoe, whetted on the wall of
his dungeon, as the only instrument of his
mechanism, and complaining only of the scarcity
of timber to complete his group. He had the
address, by an irresistable flow of good humor and
cheerfulness, to make some believe that he was quite
an innocent and harmless man; and excited
sympathy enough in those who had the curiosity to
see him, to obtain several gratifications which
prisoners do not usually enjoy; yet the depth of
his cunning was evinced in accomplishing his
means of escape, which he effected by sawing a hole
in the prison door, which is several inches thick, so
neatly, that the block could be taken out and
replaced without any marks of violence. Through
this hole he could thrust his arm, and by wrenching
off strong padlocks, and shoving back the bolts, at
the hour of supper, when the person who waited on
the prisoners was giving them their food, found a
free passage to the hall of the counting house, and
thence to the street.”</p>
<p>The saw which he used in cutting the door of the
prison, is supposed to have been one which he stole
on board the steamboat Fulton, on his passage from
New York to New Haven, and so artfully did he
conceal the saw, though repeatedly searched both
before and after his confinement, at the suggestion
of Capt. Bunker, that he retained it about his person
until by its means he effected his escape.</p>
<p>About the time that Newman made his elopement,
Mr. Butler happened to be in New York, and
on his return by land, he met Newman travelling
leisurely along, a few miles distant from the city.
Mr. Butler readily recognized him, and immediately
instituted a pursuit, but he baffled his attempt to
apprehend him and made his retreat into the
woods. Upon this Mr. Butler engaged a party of
men, with dogs and fire-arms to ferret him out if
possible, but he had vigilance and art sufficient to
elude their efforts to take him.</p>
<p>The next morning after the chase, he made his
appearance at a certain house, where he found the
table placed for the family breakfast, and without
invitation or ceremony, sat down at the table and
began to eat. While he was eating he observed to
the family, that he would not let them take him
yesterday—referring to his pursuers. “Was it
you they were after?” enquired some of the family.
“Yes, but I would not let them find me.” “How
came you from New Haven?” was next enquired.
“I staid a great while,” he replied, “but they did
not find anything against me, only that a young
woman pretended to say that I had an ear-ring of
hers which belonged to my wife, which was not
worth waiting for, and so I came away.”</p>
<p>Here, however, he was apprehended, and sent
again to Bridewell; but when he came there, he
denied being the man, and had so altered his
appearance and dress, that no one knew him, until
Mr. Allen, the keeper of the prison at New Haven,
came and recognized him. He took him in charge at
the Bridewell and returned with him to New Haven
in the steamboat. On his arrival at the county
house, the sheriff had him closely searched, to see
that he had no saws, or any other instruments by
which he might effect another escape. After the
search, he was confined in the criminal’s room,
handcuffed, with a shackle about one of his legs, to
which was attached a long iron chain firmly stapled
to the floor, and in company with two negro boys
who were confined for stealing.</p>
<p>In this situation he was left in the evening; and
the next morning, when the keeper came to the
door of his prison, he found him walking the room
smoking his pipe, with the chain on his shoulder,
and the handcuffs in his hand, which he presented
to the keeper, saying, “you may take these, they
may be of use to you, for they are of no use to me.”
The keeper, on attempting to open the door, found
that he had not only drawn the staple, but had
raised the floor also, which was of strong plank
firmly fastened to the sleepers with spikes. The
heads of some of the spikes were drawn through the
planks which he had taken up, and with which he
had so barricaded the door that the keeper
attempted in vain to enter. Upon this, he called
upon the sheriff, who came and ordered the prisoner
to open the door, to which he replied from within,
“My house is my castle, and none shall enter alive
without my leave.” The sheriff then ordered the
two colored boys (who stood trembling with fear)
to come and remove the fastening from the door,
but the prisoner told them that death would be
their portion if they attempted it.</p>
<p>The sheriff finding him determined not to open
the door, and having attempted in vain to get in
by other means, sent for a mason, and ordered him
to break an opening through the brick partition
which divided the lower room. When the mason
commenced operations on the wall, Newman said to
the sheriff, “It is no use to make a hole through
the wall, for I could kill every vagabond as fast as
they put their heads in, but if the sheriff will
bring no one in but gentlemen, I will open the
door for him.”</p>
<p>The door was then opened, and the sheriff went
in and secured him; and soon after, more strongly,
with additional irons and chains. Finding himself
now overpowered, and another escape rather hopeless,
he had recourse to his old scheme of yelling
and screaming like anything but the human voice,
and seemingly in every part of the house. This he
kept up all night, until the whole town was literally
alarmed. A special court was therefore immediately
called, and in a few days he was brought to his
trial.</p>
<p>The trial was brought on as a case of burglary,
the prisoner having entered a chamber of Mr.
Butler’s, and stole an ear-ring belonging to a young
lady then lodging at the house. Newman obtained
counsel to plead his case; but not being satisfied
with the manner in which the trial was conducted,
he pleaded his own case, in which he maintained
that the ear-ring did not belong to the lady, but to
his own wife; that very <i>like</i> was not the same, and
that the evidence before the court did not establish
the charge. He was found guilty, however, and
sentenced to three years confinement in the Newgate,
Simsbury Mines, which was considered rather a
stretch of power, on account of his infamous and
notorious character. He was consequently sent off
next day to the place of his future confinement and
labor, ironed and chained, and in a wagon under a
strong guard.</p>
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