C.
Carts and other Carriages, the Laws relative to them, [595], [596]
Casual Poor, See [Poor].
Chance Medley, how punished, [45]
Charities in the Metropolis:
Parish Schools for Education, [569]
Societies for promoting Religion and Morality, [570]
Asylums for the Helpless and Indigent, [572]
Hospitals for the Sick and Pregnant Women, [573]
Dispensaries for the Poor, [574]
Institutions for Charitable Purposes (See [Poor]), ibid.
Cheapside, a general rendezvous for Thieves, and the reason, [106], [107]
Cheats, the offence of cheating defined by Law, [113]
The different classes of Cheats explained; who are more or less engaged in acts of Fraud, in the Metropolis, [109], [110], &c. [131]
China, its Laws, and Punishment for High-Treason, [40]
Parricide, [41]
Murder, [44]
Theft, [52]
Chips, See [Dock-yards].
Churches and Places of Worship in the Metropolis, [568]
Coaches and Chairs in the Metropolis (and See [Hackney Coaches]; [Night Coaches]), [595], [596]
Coasting Vessels, &c. purchase embezzled Stores, [255]
Coin counterfeited, and Coiners:
Extensive Circulation of base Coin, [15], [16]
The evils attending it, [117], [118]
Foreign Coin fabricated in England, ibid.
Coiners, 120 discovered, [18]
Vast amount of Coin counterfeited, [181]
Different Coins fabricated, [173]
The process used in making the different kinds of base Money, [174], [184]
The period when the trade of dealing in base Money acquires its greatest vigour, [188]
Deficiencies of the present Laws, [208]
Remedies proposed, [191]-[208]
Colleges, five in London, [569]
Commons and waste Lands, the source of evil by encouraging the idle Poor, [83]
Constables, in the Metropolis, 1040 in London, Westminster, Middlesex, the Tower Liberty and Southwark, [397], [398], [399]
Their power by the Common Law extensive, explained, [390]
Rewards necessary to excite attention, [392]
Rewards to Constables, and persons apprehending various classes of Criminals, [390]
Propositions for rendering them more useful and respectable, [405]-[410]
Convicts discharged from the Hulks from 1792 to 1799, [98]
Number sent to the Hulks from the commencement of the Establishment, to December 12, 1795, 7999, [463]
Expence of the support of Convicts transported in the Hulks, [465], [466]-[480], n.
General Statements, shewing the periods of their discharge, and the number pardoned, escaped and discharged, [463]-[465]
A statement of their Earnings at Woolwich and Langston Harbour, [467], [468]
The inefficacy of this mode of Punishment, [469], [470]
Transported to New South Wales—Accounts of the Number and Expence, [472]-[474]
Opinion of the Finance Committee on the inefficacy of the whole System, [475], &c.
Proposals for employment of Convicts in Penitentiary Houses by Jeremy Bentham, Esq., [481]-[495]
Further Regulations in the Penitentiary System suggested, [495], [500]
Copper Money, See [Coiners].
Corn, and Provender stolen in the Country, how disposed of in the Metropolis, [88]
Courts of Justice in the Metropolis:
Courts for the trials of Crimes, Misdemeanors, Trespasses, &c. Two superior and Five inferior, [428]
9 Supreme Courts in the Metropolis, [577]
4 Ecclesiastical Courts, Doctors Commons, ib.
17 Courts of Justice in the City of London, [478], [479]
8 Courts of Justice in Westminster, [579], [580]
15 Courts of Justice in that part of Middlesex which joins the Metropolis, [580], [581]
8 Courts of Justice in Southwark, [581], [582]
Crimes, Specification of some not punishable by Law, [8], [35], [36]
The cause of their increases, &c., [24], [25]
should be prevented rather than punished, [32], [33]
punishable with Death—a List of them, [437], [438], [439]
punishable with Transportation, [440], [441]
punishable with Fine and Imprisonment, [442]
punishments on Rogues and Vagabonds, [443]
the encouragements to Crimes held out by the present System, [449]
increased by the imperfections of the Law, relative to small Debts, [585], [586]
See [Offenders: Thieves].
Criminal Code, a Revision of proposed, [7], [8]
—— its imperfections, [24], [25]
—— its great severity, [33], [53]
See [Emperor Joseph's Criminal Code].
Criminal People, Their boldness and many chances of escaping, [20], [21]
—— many thousands in the Metropolis who subsist illegally, [21]
—— likely to be increased, [24]
—— although unfit for the Navy and Army from diseases, ruptures, &c. are yet capable of committing crimes, [99], [100]
—— the measures used to effect their purposes, [100], [104]
—— they make contracts with Receivers, [104]
—— increase by means of base Money, [211]
Custom-House Officers, called Glut-men, connive at pillage and plunder, [232]