John Babbacombe Lee

"Babbacombe Lee" redirects here. For the album by Fairport Convention about John Babbacombe Lee, see "Babbacombe" Lee.
John Henry George Lee
Born John Henry George Lee
(1864-11-15)15 November 1864
Abbotskerswell, Devon
Died 19 March 1945(1945-03-19) (aged 80)
Other names John Babbacombe Lee

John Henry George Lee (1864 – c. 19 March 1945), better known as John "Babbacombe" Lee or "The Man They Couldn't Hang", was an Englishman famous for surviving three attempts to hang him for murder. Born in Abbotskerswell, Devon, Lee served in the Royal Navy, and was a known thief. In 1885, he was convicted of the brutal murder of his employer, Emma Keyse, at her home at Babbacombe Bay near Torquay on 15 November 1884 with a knife.[1] The evidence was weak and circumstantial, amounting to little more than Lee having been the only male in the house at the time of the murder, his previous criminal record, and being found with an unexplained cut on his arm. Despite this and his claim of innocence, he was sentenced to hang. At times, he was thought to be "the man you shouldn't hang" due to suspected divine intervention.[2]

Execution attempts and aftermath

On 23 February 1885, three attempts were made to carry out his execution at Exeter Prison. All ended in failure, as the trapdoor of the scaffold failed to open despite being carefully tested by the executioner, James Berry, beforehand. As a result, Home Secretary Sir William Harcourt commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. Lee continued to petition successive Home Secretaries and was finally released in 1907. The only other man in history known to have survived three hanging attempts was Joseph Samuel.[3]

Many theories have been advanced as to the cause of the failure, but Home Office papers show that the official report stated that incorrect assembly of the gallows mechanism allowed the trapdoor hinges to rest upon an eighth of an inch of drawbar, preventing them from opening when the doors were weighted. This incident helped lead to a standard gallows design to prevent a recurrence.

Later years and identifications

After his release, Lee seems to have exploited his notoriety, supporting himself through lecturing on his life, even becoming the subject of a silent film. Accounts of his whereabouts after 1916 are somewhat confused, and one researcher even speculated that in later years, there was more than one man claiming to be Lee. It was suspected that he died in the Tavistock workhouse[4] sometime during the Second World War. However, one recent piece of research concludes that he died in the United States under the name of "James Lee" in 1945.[5] According to the book The Man They Could Not Hang by Mike Holgate and Ian David Waugh, Lee's gravestone was found at Forest Home Cemetery, Milwaukee.

Portrayals

The tale of Lee has inspired a play, film (The Life Story of John Lee, or The Man They Could Not Hang), a folk opera and a teleplay.

Babbacombe Lee the folk opera

Dave Swarbrick, fiddle-player in the English folk-rock band Fairport Convention, came across a series of old newspaper articles about Lee and was inspired to compose the folk rock opera Babbacombe Lee, which was recorded and released by Fairport Convention as an LP in 1971. In 2012 Fairport Convention released an extended version Babbacombe Lee Live Again on CD.

One Step Beyond fictionalised teleplay

For the American television series Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond, scriptwriter Alfred Brenner fictionalised John Lee's story under the title "The Devil's Laughter". It was aired as the series' 11th episode in March 1959. In the drama, the main character (here named John Marriott) survives multiple attempts to hang him for the murder of a woman, first as the gallows rope snaps, then as the trap door fails, as in Lee's case. Unlike Lee, Marriott admits to the slaying. However, like Lee, Marriott is dubbed "the man who can't be hanged" and is released from prison. During the first execution attempt, Marriott had had a vision that he would die somewhere in London "at the foot of a lion". Because Marriott regards this as impossible, he openly exploits his seeming ability to defy death, as Lee did, and defiantly survives another attempt to kill him. Ultimately, he dies in a careless fall, breaking his neck at the foot of one of London's many lion statues. This fatalistic ending – Brenner's invention to give his fictional version a moral conclusion – has no counterpart in the original account of Lee.

See also

References

  1. "John Henry George LEE". murderpedia.org. Murderpedia. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  2. Waugh, Ian. "THE MAN THEY COULD NOT HANG". bbc.co.uk. BBC. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
  3. Jupp, James (2001). The Australian People: An Encyclopedia of the Nation, Its People, and Their Origins. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 525. ISBN 0-521-80789-1.
  4. "The Man They Could Not Hang". Bbc.co.uk. 2002-10-14. Retrieved 2012-09-30.
  5. "Where Is John Lee ?". Ianwaugh.com. Retrieved 2012-09-30.

External links

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