Susan Higges was one such highwaywoman. Dwelling in Buckinghamshire, her profession of crime stretched for 20 years. She dressed as a person to stalk the highways and pilfer from travellers, and in addition drummed up further funds by extorting males whom she caught sleeping together with her single feminine servants.
However her exploits got here to a bloody finish when she murdered a girl who knew her id. Along with her dying breath, her sufferer spat blood onto Higges’ face – leaving a stain which, so the story goes, couldn’t be scrubbed away. With bodily proof of her crime, the highwaywoman was pressured to admit, and was promptly despatched to the gallows.
Higges wasn’t the one girl to embrace freeway theft. Though comparatively unusual, we are able to discover tales of highwaywomen in numerous sources, from court docket data to fashionable songs. Some – like Higges – had been solo operators, whereas others partnered with their spouses, or ran with gangs. Many dressed as males to commit their crimes – although we are able to’t be certain why.
An actual Renegade Nell? The ballads of Susan Higges
Our foremost file of Higges’ vibrant life comes from broadsheet ballads: low-cost, mass-produced lyric sheets that peddled sensational tales of homicide and woe. These ballads had been beloved by their Seventeenth-century readers, and have become a key a part of fashionable information tradition within the interval.
It’s maybe no shock that the writers of those ballads pounced on the lives – and deaths – of highwaywomen. For max drama, many had been written from the standpoint of the ladies themselves, recounting their misdeeds to the reader as they shivered on the gallows.
Higges’ story was the main focus of two broadsheet ballads, each printed in 1640: A True Relation of One Susan Higges, and The Sorrowfull Grievance of Susan Higges. As a result of nature of those sources, we are able to’t take them as completely correct, however they supply a tantalising flavour of her life.
These two tales are spare on some particulars. We don’t get a way of Higges’ adolescence, as an illustration, or why she turned to a lifetime of crime, nevertheless it’s clear that she was adept at masking her tracks. In response to A True Relation, Higges managed to cover her felony exercise from her mates and neighbours for 20 years.
Though she was “effectively considered by good Gents and Farmers of excellent fame”, the ballad says “Most wickedly I [Higges] spent my time. Devoide of godly grace: / A Lewder Girl by no means liv’d, I thinke in anyplace.”
The crimes of Susan Higges
The ballad particulars the assorted crimes Higges dedicated. These vary from extortion – she demanded that males who slept with the ‘younger Countrey girles’ she employed as servants “give me cash for this improper, executed to my home and me” – to theft and homicide. In response to A True Relation, Higges’ profession as a highwaywoman focusing on London retailers was significantly profitable: “My weapon by the high-way facet, hath me a lot cash wonne”.
The ballad additionally describes the clothes Higges would put on when she was terrorising the streets: “In mens attyre I oft have rode, upon a Gelding stout / and executed nice robberies valiantly.” Whereas we are able to’t know for sure why Higges selected to decorate in males’s garments, judging from A True Relation, it appears it was to cover her id:
I had my Scarfes and Vizards, my face for to disguise:
Someday a beard upon my chin, to blinde the peoples eyes.
My Turkie blade, and Pistols good, my braveness to maintaine:
Thus took I many a Farmers purse effectively cram’d with golden gaine
Nonetheless, Higges’ lifetime of crime finally caught up together with her, when she was recognised by a girl she robbed at Misseldon heath. Higges fatally wounded her sufferer, however as her final act the lady “gave a grone: a therewithall did spit upon my face / Three drops of blood, that by no means might be wiped from that place”.
What occurred to Susan Higges?
A lot as William Shakespeare’s murderous Woman Macbeth struggled to clean her fingers clear, the ballad says that Higges couldn’t scrub the blood from her face. Fearful that her bloodied cheek would reveal her crimes, she confessed to her servants, who promptly reported her to the native justices of the peace.
Higges was then imprisoned, and later taken to court docket for sentencing. She was condemned to dying for her crimes, most probably by hanging – a verdict that the ballad describes as Higges’ “simply desert [sic]”.
The story ends with a stark warning from the highwaywoman: “Be warned by this story, you ru[s]sling Rosters all / The upper that you just climbe in sinne the better is your fall.”
Renegade Nell streams on Disney+ in UK from 29 March