(Thanks to Meaghan Good of the Charley Project for the guest post. -ed.)
On this day in 1774, convicted robber Patrick Madan and two other men went to Tyburn to be hanged for their crimes. Madan, however, was reprieved at the literal last minute.
He was standing at the dread triple tree with the noose already around his neck, the final prayers over, when a man in the crowd, Amos Merritt, cried out that Madan was innocent.
Confounded, the authorities ordered a short stay. For almost an hour the condemned men stood at the gallows with the ropes draped over their necks. Finally Madan was returned to prison and the others were hanged.
When brought before the magistrate, Merritt claimed he himself was guilty of the robbery Madan was convicted of. Madan was pardoned and Merritt was charged with the crime instead.
As recorded in Emma Christopher’s A Merciless Place: The Fate of Britain’s Convicts after the American Revolution:
Quite what had happened remained a mystery. Many claimed that Amos Merritt, hardly the repentant suddenly feeling the weight of his conscience as another man stood ready to be hanged for his crime, was really one of Madan’s own criminal crew who had put his neck on the line for his gang leader. Others maintained that Merritt really was guilty and had been forced by the many underworld characters who admired Madan to come forward and save him.
The saga did not end there. As it turned out Amos Merritt would not be required to make the ultimate sacrifice on this occasion, as when the case was retried at the Old Bailey, Merritt was acquitted. By then it was impossible for any jury to know who to believe.
If Merritt learned a lesson from this escapade it seems to have been overconfidence in his ability to game the system. Within a month of his release he committed another robbery, and was hanged less than five months later.
As for Patrick Madan, Christopher says, he “returned triumphantly to his gang, now a criminal celebrity.” His brushes with the law continued; according to Atlantic Biographies: Individuals and Peoples in the Atlantic World, Madan was eventually transported to Africa and there disappeared, amid never-substantiated rumors that he had made an escape to the New World or slipped back to London.
There’s another public domain life-of-Madan pamphlet available free from Google Books here.
On this day..
- 1830: Cornelius Burley
- 1800: The slave Abram, property of John Patterson
- 1786: Five men at York Castle, under the "Bloody Code"
- 1909: Richard Justin, child batterer
- 1901: Three Boer rebels against the Cape Colony
- 1738: Helena Curtens and Agnes Olmans, inviolable dignity
- 1897: Harvey DeBerry, raving like a madman
- 1919: Boonpeng Heep Lek, the last public beheading in Thailand
- 1692: Martha Carrier, ferocious woman
- 1799: Thomas Nash, after rendition to the British
- 1626: Henri Talleyrand, Comte de Chalais
- 1937: Ikki Kita
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