From this doctoral dissertation (pdf) by Gabriele Gottlieb:
The early 1770s in Charleston also saw the largest number of executions of whites who had been convicted of crimes connected with slavery. On March 1, 1771, Edmund James and Joseph Jordan were hanged for “aiding runaway slaves.” Jones [sic], the master of the schooner Two Josephs, and Jordan, a sailor, allegedly had stolen the schooner, taking with them several slaves. Thomas Dannails, a third condemned defendant, was pardoned after he was “recommended to Mercy by the Jury.” Several slaves, likely some of those who had run away on the Two Josephs, were hanged together with Jordan and Jones.
On this day..
- 1916: Benjamin Argumedo
- 1888: Oscar Beckwith, the Austerlitz Murderer
- 1852: Samuel Treadway
- 1562: The Massacre of Vassy
- 1996: Antonio James, final judgment
- 1837: The slave Julius, property of John and Rebecca Matthews
- 2013: Naw Kham, Mekong drug lord
- 1864: Martin Robinson, treacherous guide
- 1951: The Mokotow Prison executions of Cursed Soldiers
- 1289: Ugolino della Gherardesca, ravenous
- 2004: Ibtisam Hussein, child-murderer
- 1877: Jack McCall, Wild Bill's murderer