The post you are reporting:
TO HANG:
Michaell HALL of St James parish Dover, yeoman, - burglary on 24 May 1570 from house of John HEWESON at Dover, stole £31 from a chest. Guilty - to hang.
(Canterbury Assizes 35/12/5-m2, PRO Assizes above ref, from Calendar of Assize Records, Kent Indictments Eliz. I, publ by HMSO)
TO BE WHIPPED:
Ralph WATSON of Dover, sawyer, indicted for seditious words. On 26 April 1584 at Dover he publicly said: "This is a very evill land to lyve in except yt be for a man that hath a very good occupacon. I wold yt were warre. I know a great many richemen in the land; I wold have some of there money yf yt were so come to passe. I knowe a thowsand, yea and a thowsand that wold yt were come to passe so the Queene were dead. There is a towne between England and Scotland ther is in yt 200 horsemen and 400 footmen, had the Scotts gotten the towne they wold overcome the whole realme for that is the key from thence onto England. Were the Queene dead the Flemissh and the French men and Dutch men and all the whole heape on the other side wold come upon this land, and the Towne of Dover is able to howld 200 men". Guilty: to be whipped and pilloried in market-time for 3 hours.
(Rochester Assizes 13.7.1584: PRO Assizes ref.355/26/5 - m.17)
[Calendar of Assize Records - Kent Indictments Eliz.I. HMSO]
PUT IN STOCKS:
John ELLIS + others convicted at Dover for playing Cricket in the parish of Charlton on the Sabbath. He and WILSON were put in the stocks for 3 hours not being able to pay the fine.
(Kentish Gazette Aug 31 1821 p.4 col.4)
Swing Riots:
Mr John COLEMAN, farmer of Kearsney Nr Dover: a threshing machine of his (in the barnyard of Mr BROMLEY, farmer at Hougham Nr Dover), was broken.
A party had assembled for that purpose at 2 o'clock in the morning "Sunday" (Kentish Gazette 20 Aug 1833 p.3 col.2)
[NB. This is probably part of the "Swing Riots" when threshing machines were destroyed by labourers worried about their jobs]