Executions

The Gallows at Kennington Common, The triangular gallows in this drawing probably dates to 1746 when Jacobite rebels were hung, drawn and quatered. The Reverend Whitfield is shown preaching in the background. Image Source : Criminal London by Mark Herber


South of Kennington Park were St Marks Church now stands is the site of the Surrey gallows (The whole area formed part of the County of Surrey till the formation of the London County Council). Those executed included some of the Jacobites following their trial in 1746. These unfortunates were then beheaded, disembowelled, and their heads put on poles in Temple Bar.

In total one hundred and twenty nine men and twelve women are known to have been executed at Kennington but there may well have been others. The first person recorded was Sarah Elston, who on 24th Apr 1678 was burnt to death for the murder of her husband. The last person executed was that of a forger, William Badger on 5th Aug 1799.

Here is a list of some of the people executed at the gallows on Kennington Common.

Name Details
John Hanna
John Hanna. Image Source : Criminal London by Mark Herber
Executed in 1739 for purjury
Francis TOWNLEY Executed July 30th, 1746 for his part in the Jacobite rebellion. He was one of the seventeen rebels executed on Kennington Common.
SIR JOHN WEDDERBURN, 5TH BARONET OF BLACKNESS Executed November 1746 for his part in the Jacobite rebellion. He was one of the seventeen rebels executed on Kennington Common.
RICHARD COLEMAN Executed 12th of April 1749 for a Murder he did not commit (His innocence was fully established in 1751, when James Welsh and Thomas Jones confessed that they committed the crime. )
MATHIAS KEYS Executed on 6th of September 1751 for Highway Robbery
JAMES WELCH & THOMAS JONES Executed on 6th of September 1751 for Murder
JAMES & WALTER WHITE Brothers who were executed on 19th of April 1758 for Robbery with Violence
MARY EDMONDSON Strongly protesting her Innocence, she was executed on 2nd of April 1759 for the Murder of her Aunt
WILLIAM FIELD ALIAS GREEN Executed on 1st of September 1773 for Highway Robbery
JOSEPH LORRISON Known among Thieves as " Jumping Joe." Executed 8th of August 1792 for Robbery on the Highway
LEWIS JEREMIAH AVERSHAW
Lewis 'Jerry' Avershaw. Image Source : Criminal London by Mark Herber
Executed on Kennington Common, 3rd of August 1795 for shooting a Peace Offcer in the act of apprehending him

The Newgate Calendar lists many famous criminals upto 1842.



The following is an extract from the six volume, history of Old and New London by Walter Thornbury published between 1872-1878

Upon this spot is erected the gallows for the county of Surrey; but few have suffered here of late years. Such of the (Scottish) rebels as were tried by the Special Commission, in 1746, and ordered for execution, suffered at this place; amongst whom were those who commanded the regiment raised at Manchester for the use (service) of the Pretender." In fact, very many of those who had "been out" in the Scottish rising of the previous year here suffered the last penalty of the law. Among them were Sir John Wedderburn, John Hamilton, Andrew Wood, and Alexander Leith, and also two English gentlemen of good family, named Towneley and Fletcher, who had joined the standard of "Bonny Prince Charlie" at Manchester.1 Wood, it is said, bravely drank a glass to the "Pretender's" health on the scaffold. Others engaged in the same cause also suffered here; among them Captain James (or, as he is still called, "Jemmy" ) Dawson, over whose body, as soon as the headsman's axe had done its terrible work, a young lady, who was attached to him tenderly, threw herself in a swoon, and died literally of a broken heart.

The event forms the subject of one of Shenstone's ballads:--
 
Young Dawson was a gallant boy,
A brighter never trod the plain;
And well he loved one charming maid,
And dearly was he loved again. .
The dismal scene was o'er and past,
The lover's mournful hearse retired;
The maid drew back her languid head,
And, sighing forth his name, expired.

Dawson and eight others were dragged on hurdles from the new gaol in Southwark to Kennington Common, and there hanged. After being suspended for three minutes from the gallows, their bodies were stripped naked and cut down, in order to undergo the operation of beheading and embowelling. Colonel Towneley was the first that was laid upon the block, but the executioner observing the body to retain some signs of life, he struck it violently on the breast, for the humane purpose of rendering it quite insensible for the remaining portion of the punishment. This not having the desired effect, he cut the unfortunate gentleman's throat. The shocking ceremony of taking out the heart and throwing the bowels into the fire was then gone through, after which the head was separated from the body with a cleaver, and both were put into a coffin. The rest of the bodies were thus treated in succession; and on throwing the last heart into the fire, which was that of young Dawson, the executioner cried, "God save King George!" and the spectators responded with a shout. Although the rabble had hooted the unhappy gentlemen on the passage to and from their trials, it was remarked that at the execution their fate excited considerable pity, mingled with admiration of their courage. Two circumstances contributed to increase the public sympathy on this occasion, and caused it to be more generally expressed. The first was, the appearance at the place of execution of a youthful brother of one of the culprits, of the name of Deacon, himself a culprit, and under sentence of death for the same crime, but who had been permitted to attend the last scene of his brother's life in a coach along with a guard. The other was the, fact of a young and beautiful woman, to whom Dawson had been betrothed, actually attending to witness his execution, as stated above.

Most of the rebel lords, and of the others who had borne a share in the Scottish rising of 1745, and who were found guilty of treason, were executed on Tower Hill, as already stated. Their, heads, as well as the heads of those executed here, were afterwards set up on poles on the top of Temple Bar, where we have already seen them bleaching in the sun and rain. Here also was hung the notorious highwayman, "Jerry Abershaw;" his body being afterwards hung in chains on a gibbet on Wimbledon Common.

Text Source: Perseus Tufts University