1916: James Crozier, an Irishman in His Majesty’s service
February 27th, 2009 Headsman
On this date in 1916, a young soldier drugged with rum to the point of stupefaction was dragged to the stake and shot near the western front.
There are hooks on the post; we always do things thoroughly in the Rifles. He is hooked on like dead meat in a butcher’s shop. His eyes are bandaged - not that it really matters, for he is already blind. … A volley rings out — a nervous volley it is true, yet a volley. Before the fatal shots are fired I had called the battalion to attention. There is a pause, I wait. I see the medical officer examining the victim. He makes a sign, the subaltern strides forward, a single shot rings out. Life is now extinct. (quoted in Forgotten Soldiers: The Irishmen Shot at Dawn)
The Belfast youth — who may or may not have been underage; reports appear to vary on this point — enlisted in the 9th Royal Irish Rifles during the initial blush of wartime enthusiasm.
The service of these loyal units from both north and south while Ireland teetered on the brink of of civil war and some of its partisans treated with the Germans was naturally valorized by the crown.
They would experience the full measure of that war’s ample stock of horrors — including numerous executions to enforce military discipline.
Just a few months after 9th was shipped to France, Crozier was found wandering miles behind lines, unarmed and out of uniform, apparently shellshocked.
Events moved quickly from there; Crozier’s lackadaisical service record weighed against him, and it was decided to make an example of him.
Charged with carrying out the sentence* was Frank Crozier (no relation), who would attain some controversial postwar renown. In his memoirs, he recalled the pathos of James Crozier’s fate.
He was no rotter deserving* to die like that. He was merely fragile. He had volunteered to fight for his country … at the dictates of his own young heart. He failed. And for that failure he was condemned to die — and he did at the hands of his friends, his brothers, with the approval of his church.
Eventually, the British government came to agree.

Crozier’s posthumous pardon, from his family genealogy. His Commonwealth War Graves Commission entry is here.
* According to Timothy Bowman, an officer of the 9th Royal Irish Rifles convicted on the same offense received a free pardon days after James Crozier’s conviction, to the consternation of the rank and file.
Update: Corrected post title. “Her Majesty” was anachronistic … just because Queen Elizabeth II seems like she’s been around forever doesn’t mean she actually has been.
Also On This Date
Possibly Related Executions
- 1915: Four French Corporals, for cowardice
- 1871: The Paris Commune falls
- 1917: Jesse Robart Short, Etaples mutineer
Entry Filed under: 20th Century, Capital Punishment, Children, Death Penalty, England, Execution, France, History, Ireland, Military Crimes, Posthumous Exonerations, Shot, Soldiers, Wartime Executions
Tags: 1910s, 1916, february 27, frank crozier, james crozier, ptsd, royal irish rifles, shellshock, world war i
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4 Comments Add your own
1. Fiz (UK) | February 27th, 2009 at 12:13 pm
I just love retro-active pardons - it must make that young man, Timothy Evans and James Bentley ecstatic with relief…except they are dead
2. Steve | February 27th, 2009 at 2:02 pm
Posthumous pardons are about rebuilding a person’s legacy. It’s for that person’s friends and family. That’s why Pvt. Slovik’s wife has lobbied 7 presidents to pardon him. The thing about this story is the brutality with which it was carried out. It’s simply unbelievable what people can be capable of.
3. Diane | June 18th, 2009 at 9:54 pm
Found the original story while searching family name Crozier. I remember how it bothered me for some time after reading such a tragic story. I’m glad to see he was eventually pardoned. It is does help set things right. Poor guy.
4. ExecutedToday.com »&hellip | November 11th, 2009 at 11:19 am
[...] day’s executions, as with many of the others carried out across Europe in those years, sparked a long campaign for posthumous exoneration, in [...]
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