Mary Tofts (1703-1763)
Mary was taken to London on the 29th November and lodged at Mr Lacy’s Bagnio in Leicester Fields. St Andre published his account on the 3rd December 1726 A Short Narrative of an Extraordinary Delivery of Rabbets, Perform’d by Mr. John Howard, Surgeon at Guildford. Finally on the 7th December 1726 Mary admitted it was hoax. Ahlers published his account the next day Some Observations Concerning the Woman of Godlyman in Surrey ....tending to prove her extraordinary deliveries to be a cheat and imposture. Mary was imprisoned in Bridewell, but after four months was released after the case was dropped.
Mary returned to Godalming. In 1740 she was charged with receiving stolen ‘fowles’. The 2nd Duke of Richmond, Charles Lennox who had a halfway house in Godalming between London and Goodwood liked to show Mary as a curiosity at Church House. Many pamphlets and songs were written, and William Hogarth parodied Toft in several engravings, and in a play. Rabbit stew and jugged hare were off the menu.
Mary was buried on the 13th January 1763 but no gravestone has been found.