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  • 1629: John Dean, boy arsonist

    02/23/2024 11:46:17 AM PST · by CheshireTheCat · 10 replies
    ExecutedToday.com ^ | February 23, 2011 | Meaghan Good
    On or about this day in 1629, one John Dean, described in court documents as “an infant between eight and nine years,” was hanged in Abingdon, England for setting fire to two barns in the nearby town of Windsor. According to Historia placitorum corone: The history of the pleas of the crown, Volume 1 by William Axton Stokes and Edward Ingersoll, this juvenile felon was indicted, arraigned and found guilty all on the same day, February 23, “and was hanged accordingly.” The actual date of his execution is not known, but it can’t have been long afterward. The wheels of...
  • 1942: The Laha Massacre

    02/20/2024 4:35:03 PM PST · by CheshireTheCat · 4 replies
    ExecutedToday.com ^ | February 20, 2019 | Headsman
    On this date in 1942, 200-plus Australian and Dutch prisoners captured after the Battle of Ambon earlier that same year were summarily executed near Laha Airfield on present-day Maluku, Indonesia. It was the last and the largest of a series of POW executions in the days following the February 3 conclusion of the battle; collectively, they’re known as the Laha Massacre.* The individual incidents, timelines, and body counts of the several incidents are reported with a good deal of variance and conflation in the sites describing these horrible days, but the evening of February 20 as the consummating atrocity appears...
  • 1951: The first four of the Martinsville seven

    02/02/2024 4:36:34 PM PST · by CheshireTheCat · 4 replies
    ExecutedToday.com ^ | February 2, 2012 | Headsman
    On this date in 1951, the first of two batches comprising the “Martinsville Seven” — black, all — went to the Virginia electric chair for gang-raping a white woman. (The remainder were executed on Feb. 5) Somewhat forgotten today, the Martinsville Seven were in their day the locus of radical activism against Jim Crow in the South — very much like Willie McGee, who was put to death in Louisiana later that same year. In fact, this case generated a bit of a legal milestone: a month before the executions began, the U.S. Supreme Court declined an appeal seeking relief...