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Jonathan Wild
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==Early life== Though his exact birth date is unknown, Jonathan Wild was born in [[Wolverhampton]] in either 1682 or 1683 – although he was also alleged to have been born in the nearby [[Shropshire]] village of [[Boningale]]<ref name=raven31>Raven, M. ''A Guide to Shropshire'', 2005, p. 31</ref> – as the first of five children in a poor family.<ref name="moore18">Moore, p. 18.</ref> He was baptised at [[St. Peter's Collegiate Church, Wolverhampton]]. His father, John Wild, was a carpenter, and his mother sold herbs and fruits in the local market. At that time, Wolverhampton was the second-largest town in [[Staffordshire]], with a population of around 6,000, many involved in iron-working and related trades. Wild attended the Free School in St John's Lane and was apprenticed to a local buckle-maker.<ref name="moore19">Moore, p. 19.</ref> He married and had a son, but came to [[London]] in 1704 as a servant. After being dismissed by his master he returned to Wolverhampton, before coming back to London in 1708.<ref name="moore20">Moore, p. 20.</ref> London was by far the largest city in England, with a population of around 600,000, of whom around 70,000 lived within the ancient city walls of the [[City of London]].<ref name="moore3">Moore, p. 3.</ref> Little is known of Wild's first two years in London, but he was arrested for debt in March 1710 and sent to [[Wood Street Compter]], one of the [[debtor's prison]]s in the City of London. The prisons were notoriously corrupt, with gaolers demanding a [[bribery|bribe]], or "garnish", for any minor comfort. Wild became popular, running errands for the gaolers and eventually earning enough to repay his original debts and the cost of being imprisoned, and even lend money to other prisoners. He received "the liberty of the gate", meaning that he was allowed out at night to aid in the arrest of thieves.<ref name="moore25">Moore, p. 25.</ref> There, he met one Mary Milliner (or Mary Mollineaux), a [[prostitution|prostitute]] who began to teach Wild criminal ways and, according to [[Daniel Defoe]], "brought him into her own gang, whether of thieves or whores, or of both, is not much material". Wild was also introduced to a wide range of London's criminal underclass. With his new skills and contacts, Wild was released in 1712 under an [[Act of Parliament]] passed earlier that year for the relief of insolvent debtors.<ref>10 Anne c. 29.</ref><ref name="moore43">Moore, p. 43.</ref> Upon release, Wild began to live with Milliner as her husband in Lewkenor's Land (now Macklin Street) in [[Covent Garden]],<ref name="moore43"/> despite both of them having prior marriages. Wild apparently served as Milliner's tough when she went night-walking. Soon Wild was thoroughly acquainted with the underworld, with both its methods and its inhabitants. At some point during this period, Milliner had begun to act as something of a [[Procuring (prostitution)|madam]] to other prostitutes, and Wild as a [[Fence (criminal)|fence]], or receiver of stolen goods. He began, slowly at first, to dispose of stolen goods and to pay bribes to get thieves out of prison. Wild later parted with Milliner, cutting off her ear to mark her as a prostitute.<ref name="moore65">Moore, p. 65.</ref>
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