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The Smugglers of the Jolly Sailor
The Turpin Gang
The Turpin brothers came from Lincolnshire. Frances
Turpin was the landlord of the Jolly Sailor, which was an inn,
grocers and blacksmith. John Turpin was a sea captain who commanded
a sailing sloop that ran their trade from South Wales to the coast
of France, Portugal and Spain. Most of the inhabitants of the
small hamlet of Newton were members of the Turpin gang.
They
dug a tunnel from the Jolly Sailor under Newton Church to a pub
on the beach by Newton Point called the Red House. I used to play
in the ruins of the pub as a child.
Off Newton Pouint is a large flat rock (Tusker Rock)
where John Turpins sloop would tie up. They would land their cargo
onto the rock, then long boat it to the shore, into the Red House
and up to the Jolly Sailor. The cargo would then be transported
to Cardiff and sold.
The Turpin gang themselves built the Red House from
the stones of Newton beach.
When a cargo was landed, John Turpin would come
up from the Red House, climb the wall of Newton Church, where
the yew tree is and look up into the window of the Jolly Sailor.
If there was a red light in the window it indicated that there
were boarders at the inn, and it was dangerous to approach the
Jolly Sailor. The window that they used to show the red lamp was
in the house where Mrs. Williams used to live. The same house
that the present landlord John davies found the entrance to the
tunnel.
The noise of men and barrels being rolled along
the tunnel alerted the Vicar of Newton church, who when he first
heard these noises coming from under his church, thought his church
was haunted.
The Vicar brought the sound of the noise to the
attention of the Bishop, who in turn went to the authorities and
the gang was smashed.
John
Turpin was hanged at Cardiff. In those days if you were hanged,
you landed up in a lime pit. Somehow the Turpi family managed
to get hold of his body and he is buried under the yew tree. His
name was added to his family tomb long after his death.
I have noticed on my recent visits to Newton that
there is a new tomb stone on the grave, and I can assure you that
the layout of the writing on the stone is exactly the same as
on the old one. It reads
"Here lies the body of John Turpin, Mariner born in Lincolnshire
(let no man move his body)".
It is said that he went to the gallows without betraying
the rest of the gang.
Note: The yew tree at Newton is not more than 200
years old, so the planting of the tree is about the same time
as the legend.
This story was told to me as a child, that it was
the turpins themselves who planted the yew tree. The yew is a
mystical tree, it is the wood that made the long bow (the Welsh
invented the long bow). The spirit of the green man is supposed
to live in the tree.
The Turpins coming from Lincolnshire thought themselves
to be the 'Robin Hoods' of their day, as they helped the poor
of Newton. Robin Hood dressed in Lincoln green and the Turpin
gang really were men in Lincoln green.
A
small crown garrison was established on Newton green, where Crown
House now stands. The old building has long gone, but the name
Crown House has lived on.
Written by R.D. Arnold
December 1992
This story was told to me by my step father who
was born at 2 Church Road. This is the cottage that stood empty
for many years, and was owned by the Jolly Sailor. My step fathers
name was Bill Powell. The rest of the people in this street, old
Grandpa Kingdom who lived at Rock Cottage was about 80 years old
when he died. He lived all his life in Newton, so the life span
of the people who told me this story goes back over 100 years.
Neither Kenfig or Nottage can do better than this
for a true story.
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