Try GOLD - Free

Playing fast and loose

Country Life UK

|

September 25, 2024

Buoyant and brazen, the hard-riding, tough-talking and gun-toting highwaywomen of the 17th and 18th centuries struck fear and awe into the hearts of the nation

- Matthew Dennison

Playing fast and loose

SOCIETY knew what it thought about them and it was mostly bad. Brave, independent, resourceful, even entrepreneurial they may have been, but the women who, in the 17th and 18th centuries, turned to crime on the nation's highways inspired deep mistrust-and not simply for the danger they posed to travellers. For highwaywomen, a term coined in the 1730s, were worse than criminals. More than their male counterparts, they represented a potent challenge to the established order: gun-toting, pipe-smoking, violent and, more often than not, cross-dressing.

Of one of Britain's best-known highwaywomen Mary Frith, known as Moll Cutpurse, whose life of crime lasted five decades, including targeted offences against Parliamentarians during the Civil War, the author of A History of the Lives and Robberies of the Most Noted Highwaymen, Footpads, Shoplifts and Cheats, written in 1714, found little to commend.

Instead, he criticised Moll for fighting boys; he scorned her 'natural abhorrence of tending children'. Such a tendency, he impressed upon his readers, was anything but 'natural'.

In 1662, the Newgate Calendar had castigated Moll as 'a very tomrig or hoyden', possessed of a 'boisterous and masculine spirit'. Highwaywomen such as Moll were transgressive and readers were not surprised when they learned that, as a young girl, she 'could not endure that sedentary life of sewing or stitching; a sampler was as grievous to her as a winding sheet; and on her needle, bodkin and thimble she could not think quietly, wishing them changed into sword and dagger'.

MORE STORIES FROM Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Dogged work uncovers Rembrandt secret

ALTHOUGH history doesn't record how passionate Rembrandt van Rijn was about dogs, he clearly liked them enough to feature them in several of his paintings, such as his Self-portrait in Oriental Attire with Poodle (1631-33).

time to read

1 min

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

The royal treatment

Edward VII swept away the cobwebs of mid-Victorian style, Queen Mary had passion for all things small and the Queen Mother bought rather avant-garde art. In a forthcoming talk, Tim Knox, director of the Royal Collection, charts a century of regal taste

time to read

3 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

The garden for all seasons

The private Worcestershire garden of John Massey

time to read

5 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

When in Rome

For anyone considering tweaking pasta alla carbonara-a work of art as fine as the Trevi Fountain-the answer is always: non c'è modo! Or is it, asks Tom Parker Bowles

time to read

3 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

The scoop

\"The planned article was on the damson harvest; instead, we got Donald Trump's ally's taps turned off\"

time to read

3 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

The goddess of small things

For Rita Konig, interior design isn't only about coherence and comfort: it should be a celebration of stuff. Giles Kime charts her transatlantic career

time to read

4 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Farmers vent fury at Labour's conference

THE Labour party's controversial proposed reforms of farm inheritance tax were the catalyst that led 1,200 disgruntled British farmers to converge on Liverpool and stage a protest at the Labour Party Conference.

time to read

2 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Vested interest

Favoured by Byronic bluesmen, Eton pops and rotund royalty, the waistcoat and its later iterations are an integral part of the Englishman's wardrobe, says Simon Mills

time to read

5 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

The easel in the crown

Together with ancient armour, Egyptian cats and illuminated manuscripts, this year's Frieze Masters sees a colourful work by an even more colourful character, a Nigerian prince who set out to make 'contemporary Yoruba traditional art'

time to read

5 mins

October 08, 2025

Country Life UK

Country Life UK

Everything you need to know about trees and shrubs

SOMETIMES, it is difficult to remember how we functioned before the internet took over the way we garden.

time to read

3 mins

October 08, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size