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An Enquiry Into The Causes Of The Late Increase Of Robbers

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In the earlier years of the 18th century in England considering the criminal matters and consequences wheeling and dealing with magistrates and barristers to be on the rampage or be given moderate words and phrases. Not one group could be relied on and the setting got much poorer. Shifting to the well known novelist Henry Fielding, who had a tough moral sense of right and wrong and served as a magistrate. In toting up to this discourse, he started a record of notorious offenders, and employed six full time, salaried police officers – referred to as informally The Bow Street Runners and praised as the predecessors of the new police enforcers.

Henry Fielding was an author and playwright referred to for his sharp, simple farce and humorous competence, and as the writer of the impish story Tom Jones. In addition, he keeps an important place in the history of law administration, having applied his power as a magistrate to find, along with his half-brother John, what many have referred to London’s first police authority, the Bow Street Runners. His younger sister, Sarah, also was an outstanding novelist.

Born in Sharpham, Somerset, and studied at Eton College, where he instituted a lifetime camaraderie with William Pitt the Elder. When Henry was 11 years old, his mother passed away. A case for custody was taken by his grandmother in contrary to his pleasant but negligent father, Lt. Gen. Edmund Fielding. The resolution made Henry in his grandmother’s custody, though he remained to meet his father in London. Henry attempted to seize his cousin, Sarah Andrews, while she was going to church. To evade trial, he ran away. He later moved to Leiden to review classics and law at the university.
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