exe 1 The horror of three executions at Stafford.

Executions used to be held in public, normally outside the goal gates and here hundreds of people from many parts of Staffordshire would arrive in Stafford to watch such an event and determined to get a good view. Why, perhaps psychologists can explain why you would wish to watch the last breaths taken by a fellow human being creates so much pleasure.

I guess that reading such an article regarding three executions one following the other remains a fascination to people like it did in times past. This one from 1834 refers to a good-looking lad of sixteen, Charles Shaw who was charged with the wilful murder of John Oldcroft, aged 16. For a lad of that age to have committed such a murder for the price of one shilling firstly illustrates the circumstances of poverty which his family lived. The other executions are recorded in full in the article available.

But who knows of his home life, for at 16 he may have been the breadwinner if his mother was a widow and he is perhaps the only one capable of earning anything at all just to survive and not being admitted to the workhouse. All three present a truly sad picture of the early years of the 19th century.

 

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I guess that reading such an article regarding three executions one following the other remains a fascination to people like it did in times past. These three cases will hold the reader spell bound as the descriptions compiled by the press at the time leaves nothing to the imagination.

Before the 1830s little was published regarding executions but the case of three very different cases; Charles Shaw, aged 16, Richard Tomlinson, and Mary Smith, and all being executed one following the other on Wednesday March 19th, 1834 at Stafford goal and as a result of multiple hangings and on full public view outside of the goal main gate the journalists then were expected to exposed every gruesome detail of the executions leaving little to the imagination.

A well looking lad of sixteen, Charles Shaw was charged with the wilful murder of John Oldcroft, aged nine by fixing a cord around his neck. The only knowledgeable motive of the prisoner for the committing the offence was the theft of one shilling and sixpence which the deceased possessed. The prisoner and the deceased were both in the service of Mr. Hawley a potter. Both had been paid their wages at about 6 o’clock on 3rd August the previous year. The deceased had due to him one shilling and four and a half pence, but as he was a good lad, his master made it up to one shilling and sixpence. In a few minutes after they were paid, the deceased and prisoner left the place of work together and seen by various persons going towards the entrance of the Etruria Racecourse.

Tomlinson, aged 22, was charged with the murder of Mary Evans at Ranton on December 16th, 1833, and Mary Smith for the murder of her illegitimate child at Bloxwich, both of whom suffered the penalty of law in front of Stafford goal. It was not unusual to have multiple hangings, which in itself drew massive crowds from dawn and encouraged owners of overlooking properties the opportunity to gain a financial benefit-built when placing platforms on the roofs for people to have even a better view of the proceedings.

Interested in social history – just order your copy and no doubt feel shivers up the spine as you read the gory details.

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