Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations and map
- Cast of main characters
- Acknowledgements
- Map
- Introduction: ‘A soul reared in the lap of liberty’
- 1 ‘Plausible and audacious frauds’: The theatre of imperial politics and reform
- 2 ‘A Daemon behind the Curtain’: Reputation, parliamentary politics and political spin
- 3 Green-bag-makers and blood-hunters: Information management and espionage
- 4 ‘In return for services rendered’: Liberated Africans or prize(d) slaves?
- 5 ‘The dishonorable Court of Gothamites’: Corrupting abolition
- 6 ‘Under the cloak of liberty’: Seditious libel, state security and the rights of ‘free-born Englishmen’
- 7 ‘Unruly subjects’: Political removal and the problem of colonial constitutions
- 8 ‘A conspiracy of the darkest and foulest nature’: The placard affair
- 9 Bring up the body: The many escapes of ‘Alexander Edwards’
- Epilogue: An infamous end
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Bring up the body: The many escapes of ‘Alexander Edwards’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations and map
- Cast of main characters
- Acknowledgements
- Map
- Introduction: ‘A soul reared in the lap of liberty’
- 1 ‘Plausible and audacious frauds’: The theatre of imperial politics and reform
- 2 ‘A Daemon behind the Curtain’: Reputation, parliamentary politics and political spin
- 3 Green-bag-makers and blood-hunters: Information management and espionage
- 4 ‘In return for services rendered’: Liberated Africans or prize(d) slaves?
- 5 ‘The dishonorable Court of Gothamites’: Corrupting abolition
- 6 ‘Under the cloak of liberty’: Seditious libel, state security and the rights of ‘free-born Englishmen’
- 7 ‘Unruly subjects’: Political removal and the problem of colonial constitutions
- 8 ‘A conspiracy of the darkest and foulest nature’: The placard affair
- 9 Bring up the body: The many escapes of ‘Alexander Edwards’
- Epilogue: An infamous end
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In September 1824 the arrival of the Minerva in Simon's Bay, across the peninsula from Cape Town, finally offered the possibility of getting rid of William Edwards. Now incarcerated on Robben Island and awaiting transport to a penal colony, he had been at the Cape a scant year, albeit one packed with incident. But as if determined to exact the full measure of drama from the time remaining him, what should have been a routine embarkation went far from smoothly. Edwards first suffered a near-shipwreck on being transferred to the mainland. Next, en route to the transport ship Minerva, he managed to escape from right under the authorities’ nose.
On 17 September 1824 Edwards was loaded onto a cart, accompanied by his wife Elizabeth and her sister. In the charge of Third Under-Sheriff Stillwell and a constable, both on horseback, the party set off for Simon's Bay. At Wynberg dwelt a friend of Edwards, a retired sea captain named John Carnall. There, claiming to be ill and using the ruse of needing the ‘night chair’, Edwards managed to escape from the privy via the back door.
The escape caused a sensation. Hudson noted with delight that ‘Dog Dan’ and ‘the Leviathon his Protector and Lord must feel equaly galled at being so humbled by this blunt man of Law’. The news no sooner reached Cape Town than the fiscal himself rushed out to join the pursuit. Carnall was arrested and imprisoned in the Cape tronk, as was Under-Sheriff Stillwell. Charges flew thick and fast – against Carnall's wife, against a lodger in Carnall's house, against his servants. As the advocate defending Carnall later put it with withering sarcasm, even ‘the horse… on which Edwards made his escape was actually taken into custody’.
The horse's fate is not recorded. As for Carnall, he was kept in ‘solitary confinement’, as he later complained, in a cell 10 by 12 feet, for over three months. The tedium was enlivened by Barry, who, incensed by the escape of the alleged placard conspirator, came to the jail in person to harangue the unfortunate Under-Sheriff Stillwell:
I cannot help thinking what a d____d fool you was to let Edwards run away; I always thought what a very unfit man you were to be a sheriff's officer. If you had been a soldier you would have been shot for it. […]
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- Imperial UnderworldAn Escaped Convict and the Transformation of the British Colonial Order, pp. 245 - 275Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016