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A63153 The tryal and condemnation of Sir William Parkyns, kt., for the horrid and execrable conspiracy to assassinate His sacred Majesty King William, in order to a French invasion of this kingdom who upon full evidence was found guilty of high treason, at the sessions-house in the Old-Baily, March 24, 1695/6 : together with a true copy of the papers delivered to the sheriffs of London and Middlesex, by Sir J. Freind [sic] and Sir W. Parkins, at the place of execution. Parkyns, William, Sir, 1649?-1696, defendant.; Friend, John, Sir, d. 1696.; England and Wales. Court of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery (London and Middlesex). 1696 (1696) Wing T2153; ESTC R17270 58,904 40

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Look to him he is found Guilty of High-Treason Cl. of Arr. Then hearken to your Verdict as the Court has recorded it You say that Sir William Parkins is Guilty of the High-Treason whereof he stands Indicted but that he had no Goods nor Chattels Lands nor Tenements at the time of the High-Treason committed or at any time since that you know of L. C. J. Holt. Discharge the Jury Cl. of Arr. Gentlemen The Court discharges you and thanks you for your Service L. C. J. Holt. Then we had best Adjourn the Court till five in the Evening Cl. of Arr. Cryer Make Proclamation Sir William Parkins My Lord if you please I desire I may have the liberty of Friends and Relations and a Minister to come to me and that they may be in private with me L. C. J. Holt. You shall have an Order of Court for the same Cryer Oyes Oyes Oyes All manner of Persons that have any thing more to do at this General Sessions of the Peace Sessions of Oyer and Terminer holden for the City of London and Goal-delivery of Newgate holden for the City of London and County of Middlesex may depart from hence for this time and give their Attendance here again at five in the Evening and so God save the KING About Six of the Clock the Lord Mayor Mr. Common Serjant and several Justices of the City of London returned into Court and Proclamation being made for attendance the Prisoner was brought to the Bar. Cl. of Cr. Sir William Parkins Hold up thy Hand Thou standest Convicted of High-Treason for Conspiring the Death of our Sovereign Lord King William III. What hast thou to say for thy self why Judgment should not pass against thee to dye according to Law Sir William Parkins I have nothing more to say Cl. of Cr. All manner of Persons are commanded to keep Silence while Judgment is giving upon pain of Imprisonment Then Sentence was Pronounced againct Sir John Friend and Sir William Parkins together Mr. Com. Serj. You the Prisoners at the Bar Sir John Friend and Sir William Parkins have been Indicted for High-treason in conspiring the Death of the King for Tryal thereof you have put your selves upon your Countrey which Countrey have found you Guilty The Crimes you are Convicted of are the greatest a Man can commit Murder and Robbery are Injuries but to private Persons But to contrive the Destruction of the King is letting in Ruin upon Thousands of People For Robbery and Murder there may be something pleaded for Justification as for private Revenge c. But to Set Conspire and Debate the Destruction of a Prince the best of Men the Father of his Countrey no Man ever had any colour of Excuse for that I would not add to your Unhappiness I am sorry for the severe Judgment that you have brought upon your selves All that remains for me to do is to Pronounce on you the Sentence And the Court doth award THat You and each of You be carried to the Place from whence you came and from thence be drawn on a Hardle to the Place of Execution and be there severally Hanged but cut down while you are alive that your Privy Members be cut off that your Bowels be taken out and burnt before your Faces that your Heads be sever'd from your Bodies and your Bodies be divided into four Quarters and your Quarters to be at the King's Disposal And the Lord have Mercy on your Souls Then the Court Adjourned to the 22d day of April FINIS A True Copy of the Papers delivered by Sir John Freind and Sir William Parkins to the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex at Tyburn the Place of Execution April the Third 1696. Sir JOHN FREIND 's Paper KNowing that I must immediately give Account to God of all my Actions and that I ought to be especially careful of what I say in these Last Hours I do solemnly profess That what I here deliver is from my very Soul with all the Heartiness and Sincerity of a Dying Christian The Cause I am brought hither to suffer for I do firmly believe to be the Cause of God and True Religion and to the best and utmost of my Knowledge and Information agreeable to the Laws of the Land which I have evermore heard do require a firm Duty and Allegiance to our Sovereign and that as no Foreign so neither any Domestick Power can alienate our Allegiance For it is altogether new and unintelligible to me that the King's Subjects can depose and dethrone him on any account or constitute any that have not an immediate Right in his place We ought I think not to do this and surely when it is done to assist him in the Recovery of his Right is justifiable and our Duty And however things may seem at present I do believe I am sure I heartily pray That he shall be one day Restored to his Rightful Throne and Dominions As for any sudden Descent of his Majesty upon these his Dominions in order to the Recovery of them I declare I had no certain knowledge of it nor can I tell what grounds there was to believe it so little reason had I to be in a present Preparation for it I suppose it is not expected I should here endeavour to clear my self of the Assassination which was not the Thing alledg'd against me however it was mention'd through what means I know not As it was insinuated to my disadvantage I forgive such as were therein instrumental And I do also from the very bottom of my Soul freely forgive and beg of God to do so too such as were any ways accessary towards the taking away my Life which I really look upon to be their Misfortune more than mine I profess my self and I thank God I am so a Member of the Church of England though God knows a most unworthy and unprofitable part of it of that Church which suffers so much at present for a strict adherence to Lovalty the Laws and Christian Principles For this I Suffer and for this I Dye Though I have a perfect Charity for people of all Professions and do heartily wish well and would endeavour so to do to all my Fellow-Subjects of what Persuasions soever And indeed I have met with a great deal of Uprightness and Sincerity among some people of very different Opinions in Religious Matters And I hope and desire it may not be taken as an uncharitable Censure or undue Reflection that I objected to the Legality of Popish Evidence being advised so to do for my better Security upon the foundation of a Statute Law Having owned my self a Member of the Church of England I must take this opportunity and I do it for God's Glory to apply my self to you that are Royalists of that Church and of the same Faith and Principles with my self And I beg of you for God's sake and the love of your Souls to be very constant and serious in all Religious Offices and holy Duties
them out of Town upon that Disappointment and sending for them again before the second Saturday when the King was to be Assassinated By his having more Horses than usual and taking care of three Horses that were none of his own brought by a Person unknown And all these Eight Horses carried away that Saturday upon the Disappointment by the King 's not going as they hoped he would a Hunting And my Lord I must observe to you that upon the Message that was sent by Sir William Parkins one of those Horses was brought from Somerset-House and brought by Mr. Lewis who it is apparent was privy to this Design Besides this there is another Circumstance in the Evidence that has not been observed And that was the sending for Mr. Sweet up to Town before the second time that the King was to be Assassinated The first time he came up he was asked in what Condition he had left his Family how they were provided for And he said he had left them without Mony Sir William Parkins then chid him and said he might as well have staid at home And said he had once a Design to have used him in a Matter he had for him to do in Town but he had Compassion on his Family and therefore would not make use of him All these favour of that Design which Captain Porter positively accuses him for But as to the other part of the Indictment which is his Design to meet the French with an Armed Power that is sworn to by two Witnesses Captain Porter tells you he was at the two Consults where that was resolved upon the Old King's head Tavern in Leaden-Hall-street and at Mrs. Mountjoy's in James-street They all agreed to meet the late King with 2000 Horse when he was to Land with a Foreign Power and Sir William Parkins was with them And Mr. Sweet tells you Sir William acquainted him with the Design and said he had a Troop of old Soldiers My Troop in the Present Tense he spoke it He did himself that right to examine into that matter And the Evidence repeated it My Troop consists of all Old Soldiers and he was to have several Gentlemen Voluntiers that were to join him As to the Joining with the French the Raising of Rebellion in England and Deposing the King which is Killing him in his Politick Capacity two Witnesses go home to that And the Evidence as to that is corroborated by several strong Circumstances The Journey that Sir William Parkins said he would undertake into Leicester shire he did go He comes back in February and makes report to Mr. Sweet of the Success of that Journey That the King's Friends by which terms he meant the late King James's Friends were well affected That the King would Land That when he spoke of King William as sometimes he did he called him the Little Gentleman sometimes King William sometimes the Prince of Orange But whenever he spoke of the King by way of Execellency he always meant King James And when he spoke of the King 's Landing it could not be meant of King VVilliam as every body knows The Prisoner has said in his defence that the Man that was sent to Kensington was formerly Mr. Charnock's Servant and that Mr. Charnock desired him to let him go on a Message for him But yet my Lord I must observe that the Evidence swears positively that he was sent by Sir VVilliam Parkins and brought back the Message in his Almanack to the Person that lodged at the Confectioners to whom Sir VVilliam Parkins had directed him to resort to that Person that lodged at the Confectioners over against Grays-Inn Gate who did not remit him to Mr. Charnock but to Sir VVilliam Parkins to tell him that he would be at home till Sir VVilliam Parkins should be ready for him My Lord Sir VVilliam Parkins has complain'd that if he could have had time to get his Evidence he could have proved that these Arms had been at his House two Years and that he sound them at his House But if Sir VVilliam Parkins could prove that he had these Arms in his House two years and that he found them at his house we would confess and avoid it They were recommended by a Letter from Mr. Charnock a very suspicious Person in this matter to be disposed of and they were hid and lay conceal'd at Mr. Heywood's House till this design was disappointed and then carried to Sir VVilliam Parkins's House and were buried in his own Garden for the better securing of them And this on the breaking out of the Plot. Sir VVilliam says they were Rusty But now it appears they were clean and the Hilts off packt up together and all fit for use My Lord in the last place he has recourse to Arguments of Pity which is the most moving of all He has told us of his Age and Family and Education I am very unfit to answer such Arguments and unwilling to extinguish Pity But this we must answer That he did not Pity himself at that time when he might have done it And he should have had Pity upon his Country upon the Best of Kings and Men when they thought they had him in their Power But then they had no Pity on him for it is plain they persisted in their Resolution after one Disappointment they proceeded to a second and so their Design was frustrated My Lord This is the Sum of the Evidence and of his Defence as well as I could recollect it And though these Considerations may not quite extinguish your Pity yet we hope it will incline you to do the King and Kingdom Justice And this is all we shall ask of you Then the Lord Chief Justice Holt directed the Jury to this Effect L. C. Just Holt. Gentlemen of the Jury Sir VVilliam Parkins the Prisoner at the Bar is as you have heard Indicted for High-Treason that is for Compassing Imagining and Designing the Death of the present King There have been several Witnesses produced to make this evident upon his Indictment The first of them is Mr. Porter that has been a Witness heretofore against several upon the like Occasion And he gives you this Account That about the latter end of May or beginning of June last there was a Meeting of divers Persons at the Old Kings head Tavern in Leaden-Hall street in this City where they Dined together There was Sir VVilliam Parkins himself Sir John Femwick and divers others that he has mentioned to you At that Meeting they did Consult together which way the late K. James might be restor'd and it was thought very necessary that there should be a French Force sent over to act here in his behalf towards his Restoration And they did among themselves agree and determin what number might be convenient and did propose 10000 Men and that a Messenger should be sent over to K. James to endeavour to prevail with the French King to furnish him with such a number of