- James MacLaine
Infobox Person
name= James MacLaine
birth_date= 1724
dead=dead
death_date= death date|1750|10|3|df=y
death_place=Tyburn ,England
occupation=Highwayman "Captain" James MacLaine (occasionally "Maclean", "MacLean", or "Maclane") (1724 –3 October ,1750 ) was a notorioushighwayman with hisaccomplice William Plunkett . He was known as the "Gentleman Highwayman" as a result of his courteous behaviour during his robberies. He famously robbed Horace Walpole, and was eventually hanged at Tyburn. His skeleton appears in the final plate ofWilliam Hogarth 's "The Four Stages of Cruelty ". The film "Plunkett & Macleane " was based on his exploits.MacLaine was the second of two sons of a Scottish
Presbyterian minister who moved toMonaghan in the north ofIreland . The elder son also became a minister. Educated to become a merchant, MacLaine frittered away his inheritance inDublin on fine clothes, gambling and prostitutes. He moved toLondon and married the daughter of an innkeeper or horse dealer. With thedowry of five hundred pounds, he set himself up as agrocer inWelbeck Street . His wife died within 3 years, and he ruined his business in adopting the airs of a gentleman to attract a new wealthy wife. He joinedbankrupt apothecary William Plunkett as ahighwayman .Plunkett and Maclaine were responsible for around 20 highway robberies in six months, often in the then-relatively untamed Hyde Park. Amongst their victims were
Horace Walpole and Lord Elgington. The thieves were always restrained and courteous, earning Maclaine the soubriquet "gentleman highwayman". The proceeds enabled him to live the high life, as he had always wanted.Their first robbery, on
Hounslow Heath , netted them £60, but MacLaine had some fears about stopping a carriage, and although their second robbery was successful, Plunkett berated him as a coward for the hesitant way in which he conducted himself. Determined to prove his character, MacLaine robbed a man alone and split the profits with Plunkett.In 1749, the two men stopped Walpole as he was returning home. Walpole recorded:
After one robbery, the information on the stolen items was circulated and led to MacLaine's arrest — he stripped the
lace from awaistcoat taken in the robbery and attempted to sell it to apawnbroker inMonmouth Street , who by chance took it to the same man who had just sold the lace and recognised it. Rather than returning home to fetch the money to pay for the lace, the man alerted a constable and MacLaine was arrested. When his premises were searched, many of the other things the men had stolen, including Lord Eglington'sblunderbuss and coat, were uncovered. Walpole writes:MacLaine's trial at the
Old Bailey became a fashionable society occasion, and he reputedly received nearly 3,000 guests while imprisoned atNewgate . He was convicted and hanged atTyburn on3 October 1750 . Plunkett escaped with his money and his life.After Maclaine was hanged, he earned a mention in the poem "The Modern Fine Lady" by
Soame Jenyns : as an aside after the line "She weeps if but a handsome thief is hung" the following note was added: "Some of the brightest eyes were at this time in tears for one McLean, condemned for robbery on the highway."MacLaine is thought to be the original model for
Macheath the Knife, antihero ofJohn Gay 's "The Beggar's Opera ". A modern, although fictionalised, portrayal of his life appears in the 1999 film "Plunkett & Macleane ". His skeleton appears in the final plate ofWilliam Hogarth 's "The Four Stages of Cruelty ".References
* [http://www.outlawsandhighwaymen.com/maclaine.htm James Maclaine's Letter to Horace Walpole]
* " [http://www.stand-and-deliver.org.uk/highwaymen/maclaine_and_plunkett.htm James MacLaine & William Plunkett] ," "The Gentlemen Highwaymen", Stand and Deliver! - Highwaymen & Highway Robbery (2002–05).
*cite web|url=http://www.stand-and-deliver.org.uk/highwaymen/newgate_maclaine.htm|title=The Newgate Calendar – James Maclane| accessdaymonth=12 January|accessyear=2007
*cite journal|title=Tyburn and Tyburnia|journal=Old and New London|volume=5|year=1878|pages= 188–203|url= http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=45231|publisher=British History Online|accessdaymonth=12 January|accessyear=2007
*cite journal|title=Putney|journal=Old and New London|volume=6|year=1878|pages= 489–503|url= http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=45294|publisher=British History Online|accessdaymonth=12 January|accessyear=2007
*cite book|title=Notes on Duels and Duelling: Alphabetically Arranged, with a Preliminary Historical Essay|author=Lorenzo Sabine| publisher=Crosby, Nichols, and Co.|year=1859|pages=426
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