The life and adventures of Ambrose Gwinett, apprentice to an attorney at law, who for a murder which he never committed, was tried, condemned, executed, and hung in chains, in old England; yet lived many years afterwards, and in his travels found the man in the West-Indies, actually alive, for the supposed murder of whom he had been really executed. Demonstratively proving, that condemnations upon circumstantial evidence are injurious to innocence, incompatible with justice, and therefore ought always to be discountenanced, especially in cases of life an death[.]

All titles
  • The life and adventures of Ambrose Gwinett, apprentice to an attorney at law, who for a murder which he never committed, was tried, condemned, executed, and hung in chains, in old England; yet lived many years afterwards, and in his travels found the man in the West-Indies, actually alive, for the supposed murder of whom he had been really executed. Demonstratively proving, that condemnations upon circumstantial evidence are injurious to innocence, incompatible with justice, and therefore ought always to be discountenanced, especially in cases of life an death[.]
  • Life and adventures of Ambrose Gwinett
People / Organizations
Imprint
Boston: Printed and sold by J. White, near Charles'-River Bridge, --1800.
Publication year
1800-1800
ESTC No.
W19276
Grub Street ID
328930
Description
24p. ; 12⁰
Note
Attributed to Isaac Bickerstaff in the Dictionary of national biography.
Uncontrolled note
Signatures: [A]? B? C? D?