Gold dust robbery

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The gold dust robbery took place 25 March 1839 in London at the Dublin Steam Packet Company. According to the New Newgate Calendar, pp. 480ff, "The extraordinary robbery to which these persons were parties involved circumstances probably more singular than any other which ever came before a court of justice".

Lewin Caspar (18151842), a clerk at the Dublin Steam Packet Company at 16 John Street Crutchfriars (now Crosswall street), found out that 102 lbs of gold dust worth £4,600 had landed at Falmouth, Cornwall from Brazil on the HM Seagull Packet and was then being sent on to London. Together with his London-born father, Ellis (Elias Levy) Caspar (17841862) carefully planned a robbery. Its failure resulted in the transportation of the Caspars and their associates.[1]

The plot led to the arrests of four individuals. A clerk Lewin and his father Ellis Caspar, Moss, who had the role of messenger, Solomon, a gold-refiner, and "Money Moses", involved in the planning of the robbery.[2]

Ellis and Lewin Caspar were sentenced at the Old Bailey in London on 17 June 1839 for 15 years for "feloniously receiving stolen goods".[3] They spent time in the infamous Newgate Prison in London and were then transported to Van Diemen's Land on the convict ship Lord Lyndoch from Plymouth, arriving in 1841. The vessel left Plymouth for Australia on 11 September 1840 and arrived in Hobart Town on 5 February 1841, with 314 prisoners, after a voyage of 147 days.[4]

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