An Historical Account of the Fourth Plate
An Historical Account of the Fourth Plate.
1. Coleman gives the four Ruffians a Guinea to encourage them to expedite business at Windsor. 2. The four Ruffians going to Windsor to kill his Majesty. 3. Langhorn giving out several commissions at his Chamber in the Temple in writing, transmitted to him by an authority from the See of Rome. 4. Doctor Oates' discovery to the King and Council of the horrid Popish Plot against his sacred Majesty. 5. The seizing several conspirators, whereof some were sent to the Tower, some to Newgate, to the Gatehouse, and the Marshalsea. 6. Coleman examined in Newgate by several Lords of the Privy Council, but being obstinate confessed nothing of the Plot. 7. He is drawn from Newgate to Tyburn, there hanged and quartered, his corpse put in a coffin and buried. 8. A maid was hired to fire her master's house, by one Stubbs, but she receiving her trial was found guilty, and hanged. 9. The trials at the Old Bailey of several traitors, as Grove, Ireland, Pickering, Green, Bury, and Hill, and several others. 10. The execution of the Five Jesuits at Tyburn, which were Whitebread, Harcourt, Fenwick, Gawen, and Turner. 11. The sham Plot of the Meal Tub, which was to throw the Plot of the Papists on the Presbyterians, contrived by the Lords in the Tower, and several other persons. 12. The listing of the Apprentice Boys, pretending to burn the Rump on the Twenty Ninth Day of May, in Hide-Park and Moor-Fields, whereof Captain [illegible] the ring-leader was sent to Newgate.