An Impartial RELATION OF THE Seizing and Apprehending Several High-Way-Men, In Fleetstreet, etc. on Friday the Second of this Instant March, 1694. With an Account of the Manner of their Apprehension, their Names, Trades, late Places of Abode, and their Commitment to Newgate. Licenced according to Order. 3. March 1693/4. COnsidering the many Robberies committed on the Road, it is not at all to be wondered at, that so many Highwaymen are taken and every Sessions Condemned to condign Punishment. Upon Ware-Road (for this Twelvemonth) there has been great Robbing, many Passengers deprived of great Booties; no Inns having any Remarkable Intelligence, suffitient to make any Observation, or to take any Cognizance of them, as they passed the Roads, till a Country Gentleman's Servant, seeing his Master Robbed of a considerable Prize, (being overpowered by number) happened, some few Days after, (as he was Journeying to London, upon his Master's Occasions) to overtake these same Highwaymen; and Remembering their Faces, began and continued a familiar Conversation with them upon the Road, till they came to London, the fittest Place for the Apprehending of unlawful Livers, whose Resolutions are generally desperate. He being willing to wait a convenient Opportunity, for the Seizing his former Adversaries, Dogged two to Temple-Bar, where he took them with a Constable; and, after great Resistance, carried them before a Magistrate, who Committed them to Newgate, attended with great Crowds of People. The one, whose Name is Glover, being a Plumber in Fetter-Lane: the other his Man, whose Name is Terram. These two after they were taken into Custody (desirous of the Company of their third Associate) confessed his Name to be Bowel, and that he Lodged in Blackfriars, where he was immediately taken, by Persons dispatched in order for his Apprehension; who accordingly was committed to Newgate. London, Printed for E. Golding, 1694.