Ruth Bowyer

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Bornc.1761
Died5 June 1788 (aged 2627)
Sydney Cove, Australia
OthernamesRuth Baldwin
OccupationKitchen maid
Ruth Bowyer
Bornc.1761
Died5 June 1788 (aged 2627)
Sydney Cove, Australia
Other namesRuth Baldwin
OccupationKitchen maid
ConvictionStealing
Criminal penaltySeven years' penal transportation

Ruth Bowyer (c.1761 – 5 June 1788), also known as Ruth Baldwin, was an English convict sent to Australia aboard a ship of the First Fleet. Convicted in 1786 for the theft of five spoons from a Surrey hotel, she was sentenced to seven years' transportation but died two years later and was buried beside the shore of Sydney Cove.

Prior to her arrest, Bowyer had been living with her aunt in Egham in Surrey. In May 1786 she started work as a kitchen maid at the Bush Hotel at Staines but was dismissed on 24 June. Later that day the publican, Joseph White, noticed that three monogrammed table spoons and two silver dessert spoons were missing from the hotel.[1]

Bowyer was arrested on 7 October on suspicion of stealing the spoons. She spent three weeks in Newgate Prison and was brought to trial at the Old Bailey on 25 October before a twelve-member jury and Justice William Rose of London.[1]

Trial

A plan of Newgate Prison, where Bowyer was confined after her arrest. Source: Original in the Crace Collection at the British Library

According to evidence at her trial, Bowyer had on 7 October approached James Coombes, an ironmonger in Windsor, asking to buy a gold ring in exchange for silver spoons. She had told Coombes that her name was Bowyer, and gave her address as the Six Bells Hotel in the town. Coombes doubted the spoons were hers to sell, and returned them to her after examining their monograms. Later he recognised the monograms as those from the Bush Hotel, and wrote to innkeeper White to advise him of the attempted sale.[1]

A colleague of White's, publican Richard Martin, gave evidence that he, White and a local magistrate had then travelled to Egham to confront Bowyer in her home. Bowyer and her aunt were arrested and taken to Martin's hotel, the Castle.[2] Bowyer had denied taking the spoons or attempting to sell them to Coombes, but was contradicted by Coombes himself who arrived to identify her.[1]

Local constable James Fish also gave evidence, indicating he had attended the Castle Hotel at midnight on 7 October, and the following morning he and Bowyer had travelled to Windsor where she pointed out the spoons hidden in a hedge but claimed that another woman had put them there. The spoons were shown to White, who identified them as those stolen from him the preceding June.[1]

Bowyer's only testimony was to tell the court, "I am not guilty of the crime; I have no witnesses."[1] She was found guilty of feloniously stealing five spoons with a combined worth of 30 shillings,[1] and was sentenced to seven years penal transportation.[2][3]

Transportation and death

References

Bibliography

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