William Frederick Horry

The grave of William Frederick Horry, the first person to be hanged by Victorian hangman William Marwood at Lincoln Castle, 1 April 1872.

William Frederick Horry, also known as Fred Horry (December 1843 – 1 April 1872),[1] was the first person to be hanged by Victorian hangman William Marwood,[2] and the first to fall using the long drop method.[3] He was hanged at Lincoln Castle, Lincoln, England on 1 April 1872, aged 28,[1] for the murder of his wife, Jane Horry.

Biography and crime

Horry was born in December 1843, in Boston, Lincolnshire, England. He married Jane in 1866 and they took over the George Hotel together in Burslem, Staffordshire, England. By September 1871, the two were estranged due to Horry's alcoholism and accusations of Jane's infidelity with customers. Jane went to live with Horry's father in Boston with their children whilst William stayed at the hotel.

William made attempts to visit his family but due to his abusive behaviour, he was barred from further visits. Unable to maintain the business on his own, he sold the hotel and moved to Nottingham. In 1872, William pleaded with his wife a final time to return with him with their children. After being unsuccessful, he travelled to Nottingham, purchased a revolver and ammunition before returning again to Boston to murder his wife.

Trial and execution

At his trial on 31 March 1872, he pleaded insanity but the prosecution successfully argued that the crime was premeditated. He was sentenced to death by hanging the following day.

William refused all appeals and was executed by William Marwood on 1 April. William Marwood had never hanged anyone before but persuaded the authorities in Lincoln to allow him to try a new "long drop" method. The long drop method is designed to snap the condemned persons neck instantly, causing unconsciousness and eventually asphyxiation, it was considered a more humane method than the existing short drop method that had been used for centuries. The execution went without any complications and Marwood went on to hang 176 people.

A memorial to William Frederick Horry exists in Burslem, Staffordshire consisting of a granite obelisk. William is buried in a simple grave in the Lucy Tower of Lincoln Castle. The grave (featuring only the initials of the condemned and the date of death) is well preserved and is still visible, along with many other criminals' graves.

The name Horry is still common in the Lincolnshire area, but William's particular line has apparently died out following the First World War.[4]

Media coverage

Execution broadsides were often sold amongst the crowd that usually gathered for hangings and often gave gory details of the crime the condemned was accused of.

You feeling Christians pay attention, And for one moment list to me. While unto you I'm going to mention, A sad and dreadful tragedy, At Boston, in the county of Lincoln, As no doubt you must have heard, Of the sad case I now mention, Which in January has occurred. O list to the Boston crime with sorrow, And your pity I now crave, For the sake of poor Jane Horry, Who now lies in her lonely grave. A young man, William Frederick Horry, With jealous feeling in his breast, His darling wife he cruelly murdered, O let us hope she is now at rest. He went to his father's house on Mondy And at three o'clock in the afternoon, With a revolver he shot his wife dead, As she was entering the dining room.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "William Frederick Horry – History in the making". www.capitalpunishmentuk.org. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  2. "The English Hangmen 1850 - 1964". www.capitalpunishmentuk.org. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  3. William Marwood - Hangman - Horncastle Discovered
  4. Boston Standard: Letters to the editor
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 18, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.