CHESHIRE EXECUTION FILES
From Norman times to the late 19th century,
Cheshire had its own unique way of disposing of the criminals condemned
at its assizes.
For more than 500 years the county’s rulers simply handed the miscreants
over to the Chester city fathers, who, due to an obscure mediaeval tradition,
were duty bound to execute them.
Ever since the Emperor Vespasian’s Second Legion encamped beside the
River Dee, Chester has always been a magnet for visitors. Its once thriving
port and, in more recent years, its importance as a tourist, commercial
and administrative centre have maintained its popular attraction.
Today, people come from all over the world to discover its Roman origins,
to admire its halftimbered buildings and to stroll along the city walls
and the famous Rows shopping arcades.
Up until 1866, however, there was a less savoury – though, it seems,
equally compelling – reason why people in their thousands flocked
to Chester. They came to gawp at public hangings. In his new true-crime
anthology, former punishment through a fascinating collection of 18th and
19th century cases.
Authenticated by original court documents wherever possible, the crimes,
trials and executions detailed here, while all sensational events in their
own right, also bear witness to the public’s unfading enthusiasm for
watching a fellow creature being strangled to death on the gallows.
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