Jack Sheppard: London's Notorious Escape Artist
How an 18th-century carpenter became a folk hero through four daring prison breaks

How an 18th-century carpenter became a folk hero through four daring prison breaks

In 1724, a 22-year-old carpenter named Jack Sheppard became London's most sensational criminal—not for the crimes he committed, but for the seemingly impossible ways he escaped from jail. Between spring and October of that year, Sheppard was arrested five times, convicted multiple times, and engineered four elaborate breakouts from some of London's most secure prisons. His exploits turned him into a folk hero among the working poor and earned him a place in English criminal legend.
Sheppard was born in December 1702 in Stepney, a working-class district of London. He learned the legitimate trade of carpentry but turned to crime in spring 1723, beginning with petty shoplifting. Within months, his criminal activity escalated to theft, burglary, and highway robbery. His targets were modest—cloth, silver spoons, silk handkerchiefs, and watches—but his growing notoriety and increasing boldness made him a wanted man.
The first escape that would define his reputation came in spring 1724 from St Giles Roundhouse. Sheppard broke through the timber ceiling of his cell and lowered himself down using a rope he'd fashioned from bedclothes. It was a crude but effective technique that would become his signature.
Fødsel
John Sheppard blev født i London (Stepney eller Spitalfields).
Første registrerede forbrydelse
Sheppards kriminelle karriere begyndte med shoplifting i foråret 1723.
Første arrest og flugt
Arresteret og indsat i St Giles-in-the-Fields roundhouse efter indbrud. Flygtede ved at bryde gennem taget.
Flugt fra New Prison, Clerkenwell
Sheppard flygtede igen fra New Prison ved hjælp af improviserede værktøjer.
Genarresteret af Jonathan Wild
Jonathan Wild sikrede Sheppards arrestation, og han blev sendt til Newgate-fængslet.
Berømt flugt fra Newgate
Sheppards mest berømte flugt fra det berygtede Newgate-fængsel. Han brugte en krum søm og andre improviserede værktøjer til at undslippe mellem kl. 16:00 den 15. oktober og kl. 01:00 den 16. oktober.
Henrettelse
Jack Sheppard blev hængt ved Tyburn i London.
On May 25, 1724, he was arrested again and imprisoned in the New Prison at Clerkenwell. This time, Sheppard removed his irons, cut through the bars of his cell, and descended approximately 25 feet by scaling the prison walls—an audacious feat of athleticism and nerve that shocked authorities.
These escapes brought Sheppard to the attention of Jonathan Wild, the notorious "Thief-Taker General" who ruled London's criminal underworld. Wild, who operated simultaneously as a crime boss and as someone who captured criminals for reward, saw opportunity in the young escapologist. On July 23, 1724, Wild arranged Sheppard's capture and had him sent to the Old Bailey.
A scheduled execution on September 4, 1724, never took place. With the help of Elizabeth Lyon, nicknamed "Bess" and known as his romantic companion, Sheppard received a smuggled metal file. Using it, he cut through his restraints, and then—in a stroke of audacity that scandalized London society—he escaped dressed in women's clothing.
The authorities were humiliated. Sheppard had become untouchable in the eyes of many ordinary Londoners, who saw in him a defiant challenge to established power. He remained at large only briefly. On October 31, 1724, he was arrested for the final time following a burglary at a pawn shop on Drury Lane.
Back in Newgate Prison, Sheppard faced his most famous escape. Between 4 PM and 1 AM on October 15, 1724, he removed his handcuffs using a crooked nail, picked a padlock, forced multiple locks, climbed the prison chimney, and scaled the outer walls—all while still wearing leg irons. He descended 60 feet to freedom. The escape was so audacious that many contemporaries believed it impossible; some suspected supernatural intervention.
But Sheppard's luck had run out. His final capture came swiftly, and this time the authorities were determined he would not escape again. On November 16, 1724, at age 22, Jack Sheppard was hanged at Tyburn, London's principal place of execution.
His death did not end his fame—quite the opposite. Sheppard's legend grew in the decades that followed. He inspired popular plays, burlesques, ballads, verses, and prints throughout the 18th century. Among working-class Londoners, he became a symbol of resistance against authority and a folk hero whose cleverness and daring transcended his criminal origins. More than three centuries later, Jack Sheppard remains one of history's most famous escapologists, a man whose brief life demonstrated that legend can outlast law.