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Encyclopedia > William Marwood

William Marwood (1820 - 1883), a cobbler, of Church Lane, Horncastle, Lincolnshire, England at the age of 54 persuaded the governor of Lincoln prison to allow him to conduct an execution. The efficient way in which he conducted the hanging of William Frederick Harry (or Horry) without a hitch on 1 April 1874 assisted him in being appointed hangman by the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex, for which he was paid a retainer of £20 a year plus £10 per execution.


Marwood developed the "long drop" technique of hanging, which ensured that the prisoners' neck was broken instantly at the end of the drop, resulting in the prisoner dying of asphyxia while unconscious, which was undoubtedly kinder than the slow death by strangulation which often resulted from the previous "short drop" method, which was particularly distressing to prison governors and staff who were required to witness executions at a close distance following the abolition of public executions in 1868.


In his nine years as a hangman, Marwood hanged 176 people, including:

In Marwood's time there was a popular rhyme which went:

 If Pa killed Ma Who'd kill Pa? Marwood. 

  Results from FactBites:
 
Hanging - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1314 words)
The first well-known practitioner of "the drop" was William Calcraft, but his successor William Marwood (who was often quoted as saying "Calcraft hanged them, I execute them"), introduced the "long drop".
Marwood realised that each person required a different drop, based on the prisoner's weight, which would dislocate the cervical vertebrae resulting in "instantaneous" death.
Marwood also experimented with the positioning of the knot, and discovered that placing it under the left ear or under the angle of the left jaw would jerk the head backwards at the end of the drop and instantly sever the spinal cord and dislocate the cervical vertebrae.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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