More about Andrew Knapp:
| | Books by Andrew Knapp: Books in the extended shelves: Knapp, Andrew: The Complete Newgate calendar; being Captain Charles Johnson's General history of the lives and adventures of the most famous highwaymen, murderers, street-robbers and account of the voyages and plunders of the most notorious pyrates, 1734; Captain Alexander Smith's Compleat history of the lives and robberies of the most notorious highwaymen, foot-pads, shop-lifts and cheats, 1719; The Tyburn chronicle, 1768; The malefactors' register, 1796; George Borrow's Celebrated trials, 1825; The Newgate calendar, by Andrew Knapp and William Baldwin, 1826; Camden Pelham's Chronicles of crime, 1841; etc. (Privately printed for the Navarre Society limited, 1926), also by G. T. Crook, John L. Rayner, Camden Pelham, George Borrow, Alexander Smith, and Charles Johnson (page images at HathiTrust; US access only) Knapp, Andrew: Criminal chronology... (Liverpool, Nuttall Fisher & Dixon, 1811) (page images at HathiTrust) Knapp, Andrew: Criminal chronology, or, the new Newgate calendar (J. Robins and Co. ;, 1826), also by W. B. (William Baldwin) (page images at HathiTrust) Knapp, Andrew: The new Newgate Calendar; or, Malefactor's bloody register. Containing authentic and circumstantial accounts of the lives, transactions, exploits, trails, executions, dying speeches, confessions, and other curious particulars relating to all the most notorious criminals (of both sexes) and violaters of the Laws of their country; who have suffered death, and other exemplary punishments, in England, Scotland, and Ireland, from the commencement of the year 1700, to the present time ... (Printed, by authority, only for A. Hogg, 1770) (page images at HathiTrust) Knapp, Andrew: The Newgate calendar (Garden City Publishing Co., 1928), also by Henry Savage, Edwin Valentine Mitchell, and William Lee Baldwin (page images at HathiTrust) Knapp, Andrew: The Newgate calendar, Comprising interesting memoirs of the most notorious characters who have been convicted of outrages on the laws of England since the commencement of the eighteenth century; with occasional anecdotes and observations, speeches, confessions, and last exclamations of sufferers. (J. Robins and Co., 1824), also by William Lee Baldwin (page images at HathiTrust)
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