<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">Hanging: From a Business Point of View.</span></h2>
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<p class="afterdrop"><span class="fstwd"><span class="hidden">I</span> have</span> stated in <SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II">Chapter II</SPAN>. the reasons which
led me to take the office of executioner. The
reader will remember that I then claimed no
higher motive than a desire to obtain a living for my
family, by an honest trade. I am not ashamed of my
calling, because I consider that if it is right for men to
be executed (which I believe it is, in murder cases) it is
right that the office of executioner should be held
respectable. Therefore, I look at hanging from a
business point of view.</p>
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<p>When I first took up the work I was in the habit
of applying to the Sheriff of the County whenever a
murderer was condemned to death. I no longer consider
it necessary to apply for work in England, because
I am now well known, but I still send a simple address
card, as above, when an execution in Ireland is
announced.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In the earlier days I made application on a regular
printed form, which gave the terms and left no opening
for mistake or misunderstanding. Of this form I give
a reduced reproduction on opposite page. I still use this
circular when a sheriff from whom I have had no
previous commission writes for terms. The travelling
expenses are understood to include second-class railway
fare from Bradford to the place of execution and back,
and cab fare from railway station to gaol. If I am not
lodged in the gaol, hotel expenses are also allowed. As
a rule the expenses are not closely reckoned, but the
sheriffs vote a lump sum which they think will cover it;
and if the execution has been satisfactory the sum
granted is generally more than enough to cover what I
have spent.</p>
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<p>There are, on an average, some twenty executions
annually, so that the reader can calculate pretty nearly
what is my remuneration for a work which carries with
it a great deal of popular odium, which is in many ways
disagreeable, and which may be accompanied, as it has
been in my own experience, by serious danger, resulting
in permanent bodily injury. It will be seen that the
net commission is not by any means an exorbitant
annual sum, considering all the circumstances of the
office; and that it does not approach the amount which
some people have stated that I was able to earn.</p>
<p>Of course, my earnings are entirely uncertain, since
they wholly depend upon the number of executions,
and this arrangement, by which my livelihood depends
upon the number of poor fellows condemned to die, is,
to me, the most repugnant feature of my work. It
seems a horrible thing that I should have to peruse
newspaper reports in the hope that a fellow-creature
may be condemned to death, whenever I wish to feel
sure that “business is not falling off;” and that I
should have to regard as evil days and hard times those
periods when there seem to be lulls in the annals of
crime, and when one might reasonably hope that a
better state of things was dawning in the land.</p>
<p>These considerations, and the more selfish but still
perfectly natural wish to be certain of my income and
of my ability to give my children a fair start in life,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</SPAN></span>
have led me to strongly approve of the suggestion that
the executioner’s office should be a Government appointment,
with a fixed salary instead of an uncertain
commission. When the Lords’ Committee on Capital
Punishment was sitting, early in 1887, I expressed my
views on this matter in a letter addressed to the
President of the Committee, Lord Aberdare. I am not
without hope that a change in the arrangements for
regulating the office of executioner will ere long be
made, and the lines on which I think that it might be
most reasonably and satisfactorily done, are set forth in
the letter to Lord Aberdare, which I append.</p>
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<p class="right">
1, Bilton Place,<br/>
City Road, Bradford.<br/>
<i>February, 1887.</i></p>
<p>My Lord,</p>
<p>I have been for some time past in correspondence
with Mr. Howard Vincent, M.P. for Sheffield, with
reference to alteration in the mode of remunerating
my services, in carrying into effect the Sentence of the
Law upon Criminals convicted of Capital Crimes.
Mr. Howard Vincent has suggested that I should
address myself to the Honourable Committee on
Capital Punishment, through your Lordship as their
President.</p>
<p>I would therefore respectfully point out to your
Lordship and your Honourable Committee that the
present mode of payment for my services is unsatisfactory
and undesirable, and that a change is needed.</p>
<p>As your Lordship is doubtless aware, under the
existing arrangements I am paid the sum of £10
together with travelling and other incidental expenses
for each Execution conducted by me. There are, on
an average, roughly speaking, 25 Executions yearly.
What I would respectfully suggest is, that, instead of
this payment by Commission, I should receive a fixed
salary from the Government of £350 per annum. I
may say that since accepting the Appointment I have
never received less than £270 in any one year. I am
informed that in determining a fixed Salary, or Compensation
in lieu of a payment by Commission, the
average annual amount received is made the basis for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</SPAN></span>
the calculation.</p>
<p>It will be apparent to your Lordship that an offer
of a <i>less</i> sum than the former average would not be
sufficiently advantageous to induce me to exchange
the old system for the new. I may further, with your
Lordship’s permission, draw attention to the peculiar
Social position in which I am placed by reason of
holding the office before referred to. I am to a great
extent alone in the world, as a certain social ostracism
is attendant upon such office, and extends, not to myself
alone, but also includes the members of my family.
It therefore becomes extremely desirable that my
children should, for their own sakes, be sent to a
school away from this town. To do this of course
would entail serious expenditure, only to be incurred
in the event of my being able to rely on a fixed source
of income, less liable to variation than the present
remuneration by Commission alone. I am also unable
for obvious reasons to obtain any other employment.
My situation as boot salesman held by me previous
to my acceptance of the Office of Executioner, had to
be given up on that account alone, my employer
having no fault to find with me, but giving that as the
sole reason for dispensing with my services.</p>
<p>My late Employer will give me a good reference
as to General character, and the Governors of Gaols
in which I have conducted Executions will be ready
to speak as to my steadiness and also my ability and
skill on performing the duties devolving upon me.</p>
<p>In conclusion I should be ready to give and call
Evidence on the points hereinbefore referred to (if it
should seem fit to your Lordship and your Honourable
Committee), on receiving a notification to that effect.</p>
<p>Under these circumstances I trust that your
Lordship will be able to see the way clear to embody
in your Honourable Committee’s report a recommendation
to the effect that a fixed annual sum of £350
should be paid me for my services rendered in the
Office of Executioner.</p>
<div class="aspara">
<div class="center">I have the honour to be<br/>
Your Lordship’s Obedient humble servant,</div>
<div class="right smcap">James Berry.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>To the Right Honourable Lord Aberdare.<br/>
<span class="i4">President,</span><br/>
Capital Punishment Committee,<br/>
<span class="i2">Whitehall, London, S.W.</span></p>
<p class="hanging">P.S. If your Honourable Committee has an alternative
to the foregoing proposal I would respectfully
suggest that I am permanently retained by the
Home Office at a nominal sum of £100 a year, exclusive
of fees at present paid to me by Sheriffs of
different Counties and the usual Expenses.</p>
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<p>In connection with this subject I should like to
point out that in asking for the office of executioner to
be made a recognised and permanent appointment, I
am not suggesting any new thing, but merely a return
to the conditions in force not much more than fifteen
years ago. Up to 1874 the executioner was a permanently
established and recognised official. Mr. Calcraft,
the last who occupied this position, was retained by the
Sheriffs of the City of London, with a fee of £1 1s. 0d.
per week, and also had a retainer from Horsemonger
Lane Gaol. In addition to his fees he had various
perquisites, which made these two appointments alone
sufficient for his decent maintenance, and he also undertook
executions all over the country, for which he was
paid at about the same rate as I am at present, but
with perquisites in all cases. In 1874 he retired, and
the City of London allowed him a pension of twenty-five
shillings a week for life.</p>
<p>Mr. Calcraft’s successor was Mr. Wm. Marwood,
who had no official status. He had a retaining fee of
£20 a year from the Sheriffs of the City of London, but
beyond that he had to depend upon the fees for individual
executions and reprieves. In his time, also,
there were considerable perquisites, for instance, the
clothing and personal property possessed by the criminal
at the time of his execution became the property of the
executioner. These relics were often sold for really
fancy prices and formed no mean item in the
annual takings. But the sale and exhibition of such
curiosities were only pandering to a morbid taste on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span>
part of some sections of the public, and it was ordered
by the Government—very rightly, from a public point
of view, but very unfortunately for the executioner—that
personal property left by the criminals should be burned.</p>
<p>In many other countries the post of executioner
is permanent. In some cases it is hereditary, as in
France, where it has remained in the Deibler family,
passing from sire to son, for a great length of time.</p>
<p>Even in British territory at the present time a permanent
official hangsman is not entirely unknown, for
in Malta the post is a definite appointment, to which a
salary of £30 is attached.</p>
<p>In England the Sheriff is the officer appointed to
carry out the executions, and though he is allowed to
employ a substitute if he can find one, it would fall to
him to personally conduct the execution if no substitute
could be obtained. In certain cases, in days gone by,
there has been very great difficulty in securing anyone
who would undertake the unpleasant duty, though I do
not remember any recorded instance of the Sheriff being
absolutely unable to engage an executioner.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</SPAN></span></p>
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