HANGING. Retribution, punishment or barbarity?
27th
Feb. 1891. Execution
of a Murderer. TERRIBLE SCENE ON THE SCAFFOLD. [PRESS ASSOCIATION
TELEGRAM.] .NEW YORK, Feb. 27. Some frightful incidents attended the
hanging of a murderer at Washington, Penn., early in the morning of
the day appointed for the execution. The condemned man procured by
some means a piece of iron, which he several times plunged into his
throat, but either his strength or his nerve failed, as the
self-inflicted wounds were not deep, and he only lost a quanity of
blood. Despite this attempt at suicide, the sheriff determined to
proceed with the execution. When, however, he entered the cell with
the attendants and the clergyman to pre- pare the victim for the
gallows, the murderer fought like a demon. It was finally decided, as
a last resource, to place him under the influence of opiates, which,
however, were only partially successful, and it became necessary to
strap the condemned man to a board in order to prevent the resistance
which he seemed determined to make on the scaffold. More opiates were
administered, and he was bound, apparently helpless, to a plank and
carried to the scaffold. Everything was soon ready the trap was
sprung, but the combined weight of the plank and the man was too much
for the rope, which broke, hurling the miserable man to the ground
amid the groans of the spectators already sickened by what they had
witnessed. The man, awakened by the shock of his fall, began a
fearful struggle to free himself from the cords binding him to the
plank. The attendants hurriedly picked up another noose and adjusted
it to the neck of the murderer, who was this time finally hanged. The
sight was a terrible cne, the wounds in the neck being opened by the
pressure of the rope. Blood spurted out in jets, covering the body,
board. and the ground. The executed criminal had brutally murdered an
entire family.