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In the late 18th
century many counties in
The new
The gatehouse was a single story building with a flat roof upon which the “New Drop” gallows was erected for public hangings up to 1864. After this the mill room was used to house the gallows, constructed over a brick lined pit. Here is the original plan of the new prison.
In 1877 the City and
There was a separate detached house for the
keeper (governor). The prison was
expanded and improved through the 19th century and had facilities to house male
and female felons up to 1905 and initially debtors, until the passing of the
Debtors Act of 1869. The prison closed
to ordinary criminals in March 1915 and the inmates transferred to
Executions at
Gallows Tumps was the
earliest known place of execution at
Between the 12th of March 1737 and the 21st of August 1789, there were 334
death sentences passed at the Hereford Assizes resulting in 54 confirmed
executions, plus 7 probable/possible ones where no reprieve has been found, at
this location.
See http://www.capitalpunishmentuk.org/herefd.html
for details of these.
St. Owen's Street,
On Monday the 2nd of August 1790, 27 year old
William Jones and his 18 year old girlfriend, Susannah Rugg, were hanged on a
gallows set up in St. Owen's Street, opposite the old
Hereford new County Gaol, in public.
There were 13 hangings here from 6th of August 1792
to the 5th of April 1864. All these took
place on the New Drop gallows erected on the gatehouse roof. Samuel Burrows officiated at the four
executions in 1830 and 1832, prior to that the name(s) of the hangman is
unknown. George Smith of
William (alias John) Phillips, convicted of sheep stealing, was the first to be hanged at the Gaol on the 6th of August 1796. He had been convicted of stealing 21 wethers, valued at £12, the property of John Williams, in the parish of Garway on the 10th of May 1796.
There were 12 hangings between 1801 and 1837.
The first in the 19th century was that of Thomas Jones who was hanged on the
15th of August 1801 for burglary at the home of Edmund Stallard at Clifford.
Stephen Price was hanged on the 31st of March 1804 for sheep stealing from F. Harris Esq. The Moor, Lyonshall.
Only one woman, Susannah Pugh,
would be hanged here in the 19th century.
She was executed on the 28th of March 1808 for the murder of her 12 year
old daughter, Sarah, whose throat she had slashed at their home, a rented room
in
Thomas Watkins was hanged on the 23rd of March 1811 for the murder of a Joan Gwillim at Longtown. His mother, Mary, was also convicted of the murder, but Watkins insisted that he alone committed it and she was respited for three weeks and later reprieved.
On the 24th of August 1811 John Rudd
was to die for forgery of Ludlow Bank notes.
The following year William Hylett (alias Eyelett) was hanged on the 11th of
April 1812 for stealing two horses at Raglan.
28 year old William Cadwallader from
Richard Underwood was hanged on
the 31st of March 1817 for the murder of Mr. William Harris, the proprietor of
the New Inn in Ledbury. Underwood was an
ostler at the inn and had killed Mr. Harris with an axe so that he could rob
him of his watch and money.
12 days later on the 12th of April 1817, there was a double hanging, Thomas
Langslow for “cutting and maiming” (stabbing) John Green at Kington and John
Hardy for horse theft and burglary during which he stole £200 worth of silver
plate from the home of John Holford at Kilgwin House in Carmathanshire.
On the 11th of April 1818, 16 year
old John Burlow was hanged for arson at his employer, Mr. Thomas Gibb’s farm at
Munsley. The fire claimed the lives of
seven horses and destroyed the stables and a hay store.
On the 22nd of August 1818 James Webb was executed for stealing nine sheep at
Acton Beauchamp, the property of Mr. Elcocks at Colwell.
Five men were hanged here between
1828 and 1832.
19 year old James Williams was executed for highway robbery at Tupsley on the
17th of April 1830. The victim was
Francis Wellington, an old soldier who was walking home to Lugwardine and was
robbed of his pension money, just £5.
On the 26th of March 1832, Joseph Pugh, John Matthews and William Williams
(brother of James Williams above) were to die for the murder of Walter
Carwardine in the brothel run by Pugh in Quaker’s Lane,
James Gammon was executed on the 25th of August 1832 for the rape of Charlotte
Powell, aged 7, at Whitchurch. It should
be noted that after 1837 only murder and attempted murder (up to 1861) were
capital crimes.
There were no further executions
at
At 8.00 a.m. on Tuesday the 5th of
April 1864, Thomas Watkins became the last to die in public, for the murder of
his wife, Mary Ann, on the 18th of January that year, in a field at Hennor near
Hereford County Gaol, in private.
Five executions took place from the 24th of
November 1885 to the 15th of December 1903.
John Hill and
John Williams.
34 year old John Hill,
alias 'Sailor Jack', and 36 year old John Williams, aka “Irish Jack”, were
convicted of the murder of 32 year old Ann Dickinson, also known as Ann
Doherty, at Weobley on the 30th of September 1885.
Ann and her friend,
Mrs. Mary Ann Farrell had gone out for the evening to the Red Lion pub in
Weobley, taking Mary’s baby with them.
Here they met and talked with Hill and Williams. Shortly after the two men left the pub, Ann
and Mrs. Farrell left to walk to Holme Farm where they were working as hop
pickers. Hill offered to see them home
and he and the two women started to walk across the fields. They came to a gate and Mrs. Farrell opened
it and went through first. She was
assaulted by a man with a heavy stick and knocked unconscious. When she came round she saw that the man was
Williams, whom she knew and he was trying to take her baby. She ran to the nearby cottage of a shepherd
and he took her in and later escorted her to Holme Farm. The next morning Ann’s body was found in a
ditch by two men going to work. It was reported that “she had been subject to
the grossest ill-treatment and that her features were almost unrecognisable” Whether “grossest
ill-treatment” is a Victorian euphemism for rape is unclear.
Williams was arrested
in Weobley. When Hill was located his
clothing had blood spatter on it, consistent with the beating that he had
inflicted upon Ann.
Hill and Williams were
tried at
They were hanged on Tuesday the 24th of November 1885 by James Berry.
He gave both men a drop of eight feet and as usual, death was reported
to have been instantaneous.
James Jones and Alfred Scandrett.
In the early hours of
October the 19th, 1887, two 23 year old men broke into a home of 85 year old
Phillip Ballard, at Tupsley in
Scandrett was later
arrested in
In the condemned cell
Scandrett confessed that he alone was responsible for the murder, but under the
doctrine of common purpose, Jones who admitted to being present but doing
nothing to prevent the attack, was equally guilty.
They were hanged by James Berry on the
20th of March 1888.
Reporters were still allowed to witness executions at this time and full
details were printed. Jones weighed 140
lbs and Scandrett, 142 lbs.
Charles Saunders.
On Wednesday the 23rd of December 1891, 31
year old Charles Saunders was hanged for the murder of two year old Walter
Frederick Steers at Little Hereford, near
Saunders, whose occupation was given as a blacksmith and his girlfriend used poor little Walter to help them beg for money. Reportedly Saunders regularly physically abused Walter and one night when he would not stop crying, Saunders picked him by the legs and dashed his head against the floor.
Saunders was tried at
The execution was carried out by James
Billington, working without an assistant and was scheduled for 8.00 a.m. However Billington was late arriving as there
had been thick fog hampering his journey from
William Haywood -
61 year old William Haywood was hanged on
Tuesday the 15th of December 1903 for the murder of his wife, Jane. Haywood worked at Pokehouse Wood quarry at
Lucton near
On Saturday the 11th of July 1903 Haywood called at the Mortimer’s Cross Inn where he drank a pint of beer and bought another plus some whiskey before going to the quarry.
At 8 a.m. Jane took his breakfast to the quarry. Around 1 p.m. Haywood returned to the Mortimer’s Cross Inn where he had another pint and told someone that he had thrown a stone at Jane which had hit her in the head and she was bleeding. He went on “if she is dead when I get back I will bury her in the brook.”
At 8.45 p.m. William was walking towards
the
He was therefore charged with murder.
Haywood came to trial at the Shire Hall in
He was hanged on a gallows set up in the prison mill house by Henry Pierrepoint and John Ellis. This would be the last hanging here and the only one of the 20th century.
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