deacon brodie

The real story behind Edinburgh's most enduring legend

Deacon Brodie, william brodie, edinburgh, scotland, theif, trial

Daniel MacLean Testimony

Witness number Nineteen For the Prosecution of Deacon Brodie and George Smith

 

Daniel MacLean, waiter to William Drysdale, innkeeper in the New Town, called in and sworn.

Daniel MacLean — On the night of Wednesday, the 5th of March, on which the Excise Office was broken into, I was in company with John Brown and Andrew Ainslie in the house of one Fraser in the New Town from about half-past nine to eleven o’clock at night; we drank some punch together, and there was one Price and some others in company with us. I remember to have received a five-pound bank-note from the prisoner, George Smith, on the next night after the Excise Office was broken into, in order to purchase a ticket in the mail-coach for his wife to Newcastle. The note was battered on the back. I carried it to John Clerk, Mr. Drysdale’s book-keeper, but he could not change it, and therefore I applied to Mr. Drysdale himself, and then carried back the change of the note, after deducting the price of the ticket, to Mr. Smith.

 

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