From the Greenfield (Massachusetts) Gazette, November 30, 1807:
NEW LONDON, (Con.) Nov. 11.
On Wednesday last, Henry Niles, an Indian, was executed in this city, for the murder of his wife, pursuant to the sentence of the Supreme Court.
The day before his execution the prisoner attempted to anticipate his sentence, and with a piece of the blade of a knife opened a vein in his thigh, from which a large quantity of blood issued before his purpose was prevented.
On the day of execution, he was taken from prison by the Sheriff and his Deputies, (the Independent Company acting as guards) and carried to the Presbyterian meeting house, where a sermon was preached by the Rev. Mr. [Abel] M’Ewen.
At the place of execution the prisoner made a short speech to the spectators, and was then launched into eternity.
It is 21 years since the execution of a criminal in this city, and the spectacle of the public death of a human being, though “a poor Indian,” drew together a large concourse of people; the number has, by many observers, been computed at 6, 8, and 10 thousand. The prisoner behaved with much calmness, and when passing from prison thro’ the crowd, his countenance bespoke the magnanimity of the American savage.
The death of his wife was occasioned by a quarrel produced by intoxication, the effects of which are known to be peculiarly mischievous among the aborigines of America.
On this day..
- 1912: Alexander Kompovic, "nurderer"
- 1913: Frederick Seekings, the last hanged in Cambridgeshire
- Corpses Strewn: The Virginius Affair
- 1873: Four Cuban rebel generals
- 1895: Emma Williams, Frank Tinyana, and Jackey
- 1949: Arthur Bruce Perkins, "I knew I could never face her again"
- 1881: A day in the death penalty around the U.S.
- 2005: Hastings Arthur Wise, workplace shooter
- 2005: Brian Steckel, the Driftwood Killer
- 1818: Matthew Clydesdale, galvanic subject
- 1778: Abraham Carlisle and John Roberts, triggering Benedict Arnold's betrayal?
- 1793: The smitten Adam Lux
- 1841: Hermano Pule and his surviving followers
- 1936: Edgar André