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Colonel Blood's raid


Colonel Blood attempts to steal the Crown Jewels from the Martin Tower

His brash effort was the closest anybody ever came to stealing the Regalia.

Tower of London, 9 May 1671

Colonel Thomas Blood arranged to see the jewels which were kept at the time in the Martin Tower on the inner wall of the Tower. 

He and his gang overpowered the elderly Jewel House keeper, tied him up and when he struggled, hit him on the head and stabbed him.

Excuse me sir, but is that an orb down your breeches?

Blood crushed the Imperial State Crown and hid it under his cloak. His son started to saw the Sceptre in half. 

Their friend Robert Perot stuck the Orb down his breeches.

A foiled attempt

Just as they were about to escape, the keeper’s son returned unexpectedly and raised the alarm.

Blood was arrested, but once again, the enigmatic adventurer got away with it – and more.

No-one’s sure quite why, but ‘the merry monarch’, Charles II, pardoned Blood and gave him a pension!

A review of security

After Blood’s escapade, security was tightened, iron bars replaced the wooden ones around the Regalia, and, from then on, visitors were not allowed to touch the Crown Jewels.

 

History happened here...

More historic hotspots across the palaces.


   

  

 

  


Tighter security
- Iron bars surrounding the Regalia in 1841 (copyright Historic Royal Palaces)


Find out more

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