John Hewson (regicide)

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Colonel John Hewson (Hughson) (died in 1662) was a soldier in the New Model Army and signed the death warrant of King Charles I, making him a regicide.

When John Lilburne was his apprentice in the 1630s, he introduced Lilburne to the Puritan physician John Bastwick, an active pamphleteer who was persecuted by Archbishop William Laud.

He was second in command of John Pickering Regiment of Foot one of the original twelve foot regiments of the New Model Army and when John Pickering died on November 24, 1645 he took command of the regiment and as was the custom then, the Regiment was known as John Hewson Regiment of Foot.

In 1647 Parliament passed an act against religious festivals, regarding them as "vain and superstitious observances" when the Mayor of Canterbury tried to enforce this act and stop Christmas there was a riot and John Hewson Regiment of Foot were sent to restore order which they did quickly.

In 1648 Hewson played a key role in Pride's Purge and the Army's occupation of London.

In January 1649 he signed the death warrant for Charles I marking him as a regicide.

In 1649 many in this regiment refused to fight in Ireland until the Leveller reform programme was implemented. 300 were cashiered out of the army without arrears of pay.

While in Ireland he commanded an English force during the siege and battle of Tecroghan.

On the restoration of the monarchy he fled to Amsterdam where he died in 1662.

Richard Neville (later Lord Braybrooke) in a footnote from his 1825 edition of Samuel Pepys' diary:

John Hewson, who, from a low origin, became a colonel in the Parliament army, and sat in judgment on the King: he escaped hanging by flight, and died in 1662, at Amsterdam. A curious notice of Hewson occurs in Rugge’s "Diurnal," December 5th, 1659, which states that "he was a cobbler by trade, but a very stout man, and a very good commander; but in regard of his former employment, they [the city apprentices] threw at him old shoes, and slippers, and turniptops, and brick-bats, stones, and tiles. … At this time [January, 1659-60] there came forth, almost every day, jeering books: one was called 'Colonel Hewson's Confession; or, a Parley with Pluto,' about his going into London, and taking down the gates of Temple-Bar." He had but one eye, which did not escape the notice of his enemies.

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