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'''Thomas Vaughan''' was a blackmailer and "notorious villain". In 1703 he and Thomas Davis were convicted of trying to extort money from Mr Barker an Apothecary, and Mr Guillam a Tallow-Chandler, by threatening to denounce them for sodomy.
'''Thomas Vaughan''' was a blackmailer and "notorious villain". In 1703 he and Thomas Davis were convicted of trying to extort money from Mr Barker an Apothecary, and Mr Guillam a Tallow-Chandler, by threatening to denounce them for sodomy.


Vaughan and Davis were sentenced to stand in the [[pillory]] at Temple Bar and Charing-Cross; to be whipped from Temple Bar to Charing Cross, and to pay a Fine of £5 each and remain in Prison until it was paid. <ref> http://www.rictornorton.co.uk/eighteen/1707vaug.htm Rictor Norton (Ed.), "Trials of Thomas Vaughan and Thomas Davis, 1707," Homosexuality in Eighteenth-Century England: A Sourcebook. 29 April 2007, updated 15 June 2008</ref>
Vaughan and Davis were sentenced to stand in the [[pillory]] at Temple Bar and Charing-Cross; to be whipped from Temple Bar to Charing Cross, and to pay a Fine of £5 each and remain in Prison until it was paid. <ref> http://www.rictornorton.co.uk/eighteen/1707vaug.htm Rictor Norton (Ed.), "Trials of Thomas Vaughan and Thomas Davis, 1707," ''Homosexuality in Eighteenth-Century England: A Sourcebook''. 29 April 2007, updated 15 June 2008</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 08:31, 19 August 2013

Thomas Vaughan was a blackmailer and "notorious villain". In 1703 he and Thomas Davis were convicted of trying to extort money from Mr Barker an Apothecary, and Mr Guillam a Tallow-Chandler, by threatening to denounce them for sodomy.

Vaughan and Davis were sentenced to stand in the pillory at Temple Bar and Charing-Cross; to be whipped from Temple Bar to Charing Cross, and to pay a Fine of £5 each and remain in Prison until it was paid. [1]

References

<references>

  1. http://www.rictornorton.co.uk/eighteen/1707vaug.htm Rictor Norton (Ed.), "Trials of Thomas Vaughan and Thomas Davis, 1707," Homosexuality in Eighteenth-Century England: A Sourcebook. 29 April 2007, updated 15 June 2008