Browse Items (10 total)
- Subject contains "Crime"
The last words of S. Tully Who was executed at South Boston, for piracy December 10, 1812
The ballad on this broadside is about execution and crime. This broadside has one woodcut and five ornaments.
Date:1812
Publisher:Coverly, Nathaniel, 1775?-1824, printer.
The last words of S. Tully, who was executed at South Boston, for piracy, December 10th, 1812.
The ballad on this broadside is about an execution and the last words of the murderer.
Date:1812
Publisher:
A copy of a letter from Samuel Tully, alias R. Heathcoate, who is under sentence of death for piracy and murder to his father, in England; written the day he received sentence, but copied over since his confinement in the state prison, in presence of some gentlemen whose duty it is to attend there
The ballad on this broadside is about murder and crime. This broadside has one woodcut and three ornaments.
Date:1812
Publisher:Coverly, Nathaniel, 1775?-1824, printer.
Thou shalt do no murder. On Thursday, December 16, sentence of death was passed in a most solemn and impressive manner, by the Hon. Judge Sewall, upon Livermore and Angier, after a conviction of the murder of Nicholas John Cruay [i.e., Crevay], an Indian, on the night of the 23d. November
The ballads on this broadside are about murder and crime. This broadside has two woodcuts.
Date:1813
Publisher:Coverly, Nathaniel, 1775?-1824, printer.
On Samuel Tully and John Dalton, alias R. Heathcote, who is sentenced to be executed the 10th day of December, 1812, for piracy and murder.
The ballad on this broadside is about an execution. This broadside has one ornament.
Date:1812
Publisher:
Boston, December 18, 1813. On Thursday last, two young men, one named Livermore and the other Angier, received the sentence of death, at the Supreme Court held at Cambridge, for the murder of an Indian man, named Nicholas John Cruay [i.e., Crevay], and his wife ...
The ballad on this broadside is about trials and crimes. This broadside has two woodcuts.
Date:1813
Publisher:Coverly, Nathaniel, 1775?-1824, printer.
William Riley: together with the Sailor boy
The ballads on this broadside are about love. This broadside has two woodcuts and two ornaments.
Date:1810-1814
Publisher:Coverly, Nathaniel, 1775?-1824, printer.
Reflections of Sarah Thomas, an unfortunate young woman, who was executed for stealing two surplices, out of St. Mary's Church, London. These few lines are dedicated to all young persons, in hopes they will take warning by the untimely end of the said young woman, and refrain from vice, for as the apostle St. Paul says, "the wages of sin is death"
The ballad on this broadside is about an execution. This broadside has one woodcut and one ornament.
Date:1810-1814
Publisher:
Pompey and his associates
The ballad on this broadside is about Pompey and sinning. This broadside has one woodcut.
Date:1810-1814
Publisher:
Captain James, who was hung and gibbeted in England, for starving to death his cabbin-boy [sic]
The ballad on this broadside is about the crimes and punishment of Captain James. This broadside has one woodcut and one ornament.
Date:1810-1814
Publisher:Coverly, Nathaniel, 1775?-1824, printer.