Women, Pleas and Property Crime: Understanding the fortunes of female petitioners in London, 1819-1840

Orr, David orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-6128-8296 (2020) Women, Pleas and Property Crime: Understanding the fortunes of female petitioners in London, 1819-1840. Athens Journal of History, 6 (2). pp. 119-138.

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Abstract

From a representative sample of petitions submitted (1819-1840) by felons convicted at the Old Bailey, only thirty-nine were female petitioners. This approximates the female-male felony ratio of convictions for property crimes in London at the time . The thirty-nine female petitioners are the focus of this article. In particular, the article examines evidence and arguments suggesting that ideas of morality and social constructions of femininity rather than legality most influenced the outcome of their appeals. Second, the article will examine the extent to which elite decision-makers used their ideals of motherhood, marriage status, and chastity to determine both the credibility of appeals and the moral integrity of the petitioners. Third, the article will examine how constructions of respectability were also applied to those who petitioned on behalf of female convicts and whether these ideas influenced the perception of the petitioner as credible. Ultimately, the article will conclude by assessing the degree to which subjective perceptions of petitioners and prisoners as moral or respectable determined who was deemed ‘fit subject of mercy’.


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