Capital Punishment Amendment Act 1868

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Capital Punishment Amendment Act 1868 [1]
Act of Parliament
Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom (1837).svg
Long title An Act to provide for carrying out of Capital Punishment within Prisons.
Citation 31 & 32 Vict. c. 24
Other legislation
Amended by Coroners Act 1887
Repealed by
Status: Repealed

The Capital Punishment Amendment Act 1868 (31 & 32 Vict. c. 24) received royal assent on 29 May 1868, putting an end to public executions for murder in the United Kingdom. [2] The act required that all prisoners sentenced to death for murder be executed within the walls of the prison in which they were being held, and that their bodies be buried in the prison grounds. [3] It was prompted at least in part by the efforts of reformers such as Sir Robert Peel and Charles Dickens, who called in the national press for an end to the "grotesque spectacle" of public executions. [4] Abolition of public executions was one of the recommendations of the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment 1864-1866. A similar measure, the Capital Punishment within Prisons Bill, had been introduced in 1867, but failed for lack of parliamentary time. [5]

Contents

The first execution under the new law was carried out by William Calcraft on 13 August 1868 at Maidstone Gaol; 18-year-old Thomas Wells was hanged for the murder of Edward Walshe, [6] the stationmaster at Dover Priory railway station. [7] Calcraft had previously carried out the last public execution in the UK, when he hanged the Fenian Michael Barrett in front of Newgate Prison on 26 May 1868 for his part in the 1867 Clerkenwell Outrage. [8]

The Act applied only to prisoners "sentenced on any indictment or inquisition for murder" and not those convicted of other offences carrying the death penalty (such as high treason). [9] In theory, therefore, those convicted of such offences could be executed in public up until the final abolition of capital punishment in the United Kingdom in 1998. [10] In practice, however, all executions for treason during the 20th century were carried out within prison walls.

See also

References

Citations

  1. This short title was conferred on this Act by section 1 of this Act.
  2. Fielding (2008), p. 3
  3. Capital Punishment Amendment Act 1868 (c.24), Office of Public Sector Information, archived from the original on 5 August 2012, retrieved 13 September 2010
  4. Fielding (2008), p. 4
  5. McConville (1995), p. 409
  6. Fielding (1994), p. 2
  7. Fielding (2008), pp. 3–4
  8. Pratt (2002), chapter 2
  9. Capital Punishment Amendment Act 1868, s 2
  10. Law Commission, Codification of the Criminal Law – Treason Sedition and Allied Offences (Law Com Working Paper No 72, 1977), para 35

Bibliography

  • Fielding, Steve (1994), Hangman's Record 1868–1899, vol. 1, Chancery House, ISBN   978-0-900246-65-4
  • Fielding, Steve (2008), The Executioner's Bible: The Story of Every British Hangman of the Twentieth Century, John Blake Publishing, ISBN   978-1-84454-648-0
  • McConville, Seán (1995), English local prisons, 1860–1900: next only to death, Routledge, ISBN   978-0-415-03295-7
  • Pratt, John (2002), Punishment and Civilization: Penal Tolerance and Intolerance in Modern Society, Sage Publications, ISBN   978-0-7619-4753-0