James Berry (hangman)

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James Berry (February 8, 1852October 21, 1913) was an English executioner from 1884 until 1891. Berry was born at Heckmondwike in Yorkshire.

He served eight years with the [Bradford Police Force, then tried himself as a boot salesman. Since he did not earn enough for the upkeep of his family, he applied for the post of executioner after William Marwood's death (1883) but did not get the job, even after being shortlisted, until the short period of Bartholomew Binns in office was over.

Berry was the first British hangman literate and communicative enough to be able to write freely about his work and the last to be permitted to do so. He considered that the hangman was the last link in what he called the "chain of legal retribution". His most important contribution to the science of hanging was the amendment and the refinement of the "long-drop" theory developed by William Marwood whom Berry knew quite well. His improvements were intended to diminish mental and physical suffering and some of them remained standard practice until the abolition of capital punishment for murder. Unfortunately, while trying to improve the standards of his craft, he made some errors of judgment which resulted in more or less bungled executions. The worst case was the execution of Robert Goodale on November 30, 1885 at Norwich. The prisoner was given too long a drop so that the rope decapitated him. Berry's time in office came to an end following interference in his judgement by the prison medical officer at Kirkdale regarding the appropriate length of drop; Berry compromised but the condemned man John Conway was nearly decapitated. In March 1892 Berry wrote his letter of resignation, probably without knowing that in October of the previous year the Home Office had already decided that "the employment of Berry as Executioner should no longer be recommended to the High Sheriffs". An insight into Berry's behaviour and methods can be read in the book "My Experiences as an Executioner" in which he describes his methods and recalls the final moments of some of the people he executed.

Berry carried out 131 hangings in his seven years in office, including those of 5 women. He was the executioner due to hang John Lee . However, the trap door repeatly failed to open and Lee's sentence was commuted. James Berry also hanged William Bury, a man suspected by some of being Jack the Ripper. In his book My Experiences as an Executioner James Berry is convinced he was the one to put a final stop to the Whitechapel murders although there have always been multiple suspects.

Following his retirement, Berry toured as evangelist and gave lectures on phrenology. In his book The Hangman's Thoughts Above the Gallows (1905) he complains that "the law of capital punishment falls with terrible weight upon the hangman and that to allow a man to follow such an occupation is doing him a deadly wrong", which logically would mean that he was now advocating the abolition of capital punishment.

[edit] Literature

Evans, Stewart P., Executioner. The Chronicles of James Berry, Victorian Hangman, Sutton Publishing (2004), ISBN 0-7509-3407-7

[edit] See also