Everything about William Brodie totally explained
William Brodie (
1741–
1788), more commonly known by his prestigious title of
Deacon Brodie, was a
Scottish cabinet-maker,
deacon of the trades
guild and
Edinburgh city councillor, who maintained a secret life as a
burglar, partly for the thrill, and partly to fund his
gambling.
By day, Brodie was a respectable
businessman, member of the
burgh council and deacon (or president) of the Incorporation of
Wrights and
Masons. Part of his job in building cabinets was to install and repair their
locks and other security mechanisms and repair door locks. He also served on a
jury. He socialised with the gentry of Edinburgh, meeting poet
Robert Burns and the painter Sir
Henry Raeburn. He was also a member of The
Edinburgh Cape Club (External Link
)
At night, however, Brodie became a burglar and thief. He used his daytime job as a way to gain knowledge about the security mechanisms of his clients and to copy their
keys using
wax impressions. As the foremost
wright of the city, Brodie was asked to work in the homes of many of the richest members of Edinburgh society. He used the illicit money to maintain his second life, including five children, two
mistresses who didn't know of each other, and a gambling habit. He reputedly began his criminal career around
1768 when he copied keys to a bank door and stole £800. In
1786 he recruited a gang of three thieves, Brown, Smith and Ainslie.
The case that lead to Brodie's downfall began later in 1786 when he organised an armed raid on an
Excise office in
Chessel's Court on the
Canongate. Brodie's plan failed and Ainslie was captured. Ainslie agreed to turn
King's evidence, to avoid
transportation, and informed on the rest of the gang. Brodie escaped to the
Netherlands intending to flee to the
United States but was arrested in
Amsterdam and shipped back to Edinburgh for trial.
The trial started
August 27 1788. At first there was no hard evidence against Brodie before the tools of his criminal trade were found in his house; copied keys, a disguise and
pistols. The jury found Brodie and his
henchman George Smith, a
grocer,
guilty. Smith was an
English locksmith, he was responsible for a number of thefts, even stealing the
silver mace from the
University of Edinburgh.
Brodie and Smith were
hanged at the
Tolbooth October 1 1788, using a
gallows Brodie had designed and funded the year before. According to one tale, Brodie wore a
steel collar and
silver tube to prevent the hanging from being fatal. It was said that he'd bribed the hangman to ignore it and arranged for his body to be removed quickly in the hope that he could later be revived. If so, the plan failed. Brodie was buried in an unmarked grave at the
Parish Church in
Buccleuch. However rumours of his being seen in
Paris circulated later and gave the story of his scheme to evade death further publicity.
Popular
myth holds that Deacon Brodie built the first gallows in Edinburgh and was also its first victim. Of this
William Roughead in
Classic Crimes states that after research he was sure that although the Deacon may have had some hand in the design
"...it was certainly not of his construction, nor was he the first to benefit by its ingenuity".
The
dichotomy between Brodie's respectable
façade, and his real nature inspired
Robert Louis Stevenson to write
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. Stevenson's father had
furniture made by Brodie.
Deacon Brodie is commemorated by a
pub of that name on
Edinburgh's
Royal Mile, on the corner between the Lawnmarket and Bank Street which leads down to The Mound, and a
close (or alleyway) off the Royal Mile has been named after him, there's also a pub in Ward Road,
Dundee named after him. A pub in
New York City carrying his name sits on the south side of the famous west side 46th Street Restaurant Row between 8th Avenue and 9th Avenue, closer to 9th Avenue.
In
1997 a
TV movie of the same name was made starring
Billy Connolly (External Link
).
Further Information
Get more info on 'William Brodie'.
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