Thomas Dangerfield

British informer
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Quick Facts
Born:
1650, Waltham, Essex, Eng.
Died:
1685, London (aged 35)

Thomas Dangerfield (born 1650, Waltham, Essex, Eng.—died 1685, London) was a British informer who falsely accused British Roman Catholics of conspiracy during the panic created by the fictitious Popish Plot of 1678, based on Titus Oates’s allegations that Catholics were plotting to murder King Charles II and take over the government.

As a young man, Dangerfield robbed his father, a farmer, and was imprisoned several times for counterfeiting and other crimes. Entering the pay of Mrs. Elizabeth Cellier, a Roman Catholic, Dangerfield took on the job of aiding Catholic suspects by defaming their accusers. But he soon betrayed his employer and publicly charged that, through Mrs. Cellier, Catholic nobles had paid him to assassinate Charles II and the Whig leader Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury. Although incriminating papers, planted by Dangerfield, were found in a meal tub at Mrs. Cellier’s house, his testimony at her trial was so suspect that she was acquitted of treason.

Dangerfield continued to level charges against high-ranking Catholics, including Charles II’s brother James, Duke of York. Finally, in 1685 he was convicted of libel for his anti-Catholic tract “Narrative” (1679). After being publicly pilloried and whipped, he was assaulted and struck in the eye with a cane by a barrister, Robert Frances; he died shortly afterward from the blow.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.