The Highwaymen of Hounslow Heath
Once part of the extensive Forest of
Middlesex, and now largely buried beneath the runways of London Airport,
Hounslow Heath was for more than 200 years the most dangerous place in
Britain. Between the 17th and early 19th centuries, the Heath occupied
perhaps 25 square miles. No one was really certain where its boundaries
lay, and no one cared, for it was a tract of country to be crossed as
quickly as possible. Though Hounslow itself was not large, it was after
London the most important of coaching centres. Across the Heath ran the
Bath Road and the Exeter Road, along which travelled wealthy visitors to
West Country resorts and courtiers travelling to Windsor. All provided
rich pickings for highwaymen lurking in copses bordering the lonely ways.
The first of the legendary highwaymen were Royalist officers who
"took to the road" when they were outlawed under the
Commonwealth. These were men familiar with the relatively new-fangled
pistols, which gave them an advantage over their victims, usually only
armed with swords.
Perhaps because they concentrated on the wealthy, the highwaymen became
popular heroes. No one, except the victims, grieved when the dukes of
Northumberland and St Albans were held up on the Heath at the end of the
17th century. And when one audacious villain pasted notices on the doors
of rich Londoners telling them they should not venture forth without less
than a watch and 10 guineas, the whole town was convulsed with laughter.
Famous Highwaymen on the Heath
While many of the highwaymen were thugs pure and simple, it cannot be
denied that some of them had a certain flair. There was Twysden, Bishop of
Raphoe, who was shot and killed while carrying out a robbery on the Heath-
though it was later given out that he had died of 'an inflammation'.
Others returned money to needy victims, and released women and children
unmolested, including the children of the Prince of Wales, held up at
Hounslow in 1741. There are even accounts of robberies in which the victim
is referred to as 'a man' and the robber as 'a gentleman'.
To be robbed by a famous highwayman was regarded as something of an honour.
When James Maclaine accidentally wounded Horace Walpole while attempting
to rob him, the antiquarian bore no grudge and wrote to tell him so. In
June 1750, Maclaine also held up Lord Eglington, taking 50 guineas and his
lordship's blunderbuss. Dick Turpin is credited with having stayed in most
old pubs in the Hounslow area, but in fact he mostly confined his
activities to Essex, North London and Yorkshire. The most gallant of the
Heath's highwaymen was probably the French-born Claude
Duval, who danced
with a beautiful victim on the Heath and let her wealthy husband go for
£100.
Despite the inefficiency of the authorities, few highwaymen survived
beyond their early twenties. Betrayed for blood-money, or by their own
carelessness, most of them ended their short lives on Tyburn Tree, where
felons were hanged. Most died well, and when they were dead, their bodies
were returned to the scene of their crimes, there to hang rotting as a
lesson to others. So plentiful were the gibbets on Hounslow Heath, that
they came to be regarded as landmarks, and even figured on 18th century
maps.
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