In October 1747, members of the gang led a successful raid against a government
Custom House in
Poole, which was holding about thirty
hundredweight (3,360 lbs) of tea, thirty-nine casks of
brandy and rum, and a small bag of coffee captured from the smugglers' ship
Three-Brothers in September. The shipment from
Guernsey, worth about £500, had been organised by the Hawkhurst Gang working with a group from east
Hampshire and was intended to be landed at
Christchurch Bay, but was captured by a revenue vessel
Swift commanded by Captain William Johnson on 22 September 1747. The goods were then taken to Poole, after the crew had escaped in a small boat. At a meeting in
Charlton Forest, Richard Perin, who had gone to Guernsey to buy the goods, made an agreement with the local men to recover the contraband. Thirty armed men, including Kingsmill,
Fairall and about seven other Hawkhurst men, rode to Poole, stopping to rest in the
New Forest. Arriving in Poole, at about 11 pm, they found that the customs house was under the guns of a naval
sloop. The more local men were for abandoning the attempt, but the Hawkhurst men said they would continue alone, and it was then agreed that they would all continue. It was soon realised that as the tide fell the ship's guns would no longer be in sight of the customs house. The gang broke into the customs house around 2 am on 8 October, escaping on horseback with the tea. They left the brandy, rum and coffee at the customs house, presumably due to insufficient transport. The smugglers were not opposed at any stage of the journey. The Customs Service offered a large reward of £500 for their capture. After the capture of
Arthur Gray in 1747 Kingsmill became the leader of the Hawkhurst Gang. ==The Battle of Goudhurst (1747)==