(Thanks to Meaghan Good of the Charley Project for the guest post. -ed.)
On this date in 1802, disgraced colonial administrator Joseph Wall was executed in London for crimes committed on the appropriately named island of Goree, off the coast of modern-day Senegal in Africa.
–“An Authentic Narrative of the Life of Joseph Wall, Esq., Late Governor of Goree” (pdf)
The Irish-born Wall came from an “ancient and respectable family.” He became a soldier and distinguished himself in Cuba during the Seven Years’ War, but as a civilian he wasn’t up to par: he allegedly assaulted a girl he was courting, and later killed a man in a duel. In 1779, he became Lieutenant Governor of Goree, where he quickly developed a reputation for brutality.
Over the next few years his health began to suffer and, in 1782, he decided to return to England.
On July 10, 1782, shortly before Wall’s departure, a deputation of his men approached him and asked to be paid their back wages. Outraged by the effrontery of the help, Wall ordered the petitioners arrested on charges of mutiny. Without benefit of court-martial, seven of the men were sentenced to flogging, four of them to an incredible 800 lashes each. Three died a few days after the beatings.
Wall was charged with cruelty on his return home, but the charges were initially dropped for lack of evidence. After more witnesses turned up, Wall had to flee to the Continent, where he lived under an assumed name for several years. He came back to England in 1797 and in 1801 he surrendered himself to stand trial.
Since all but two of the witnesses against him had died by then, Wall may have expected that the case against him had weakened. Instead he found himself convicted of murder and sentenced to be hanged.
His execution didn’t go well: it was a “short drop” hanging, and when the trap sprung, the knot on the rope slipped around to the back of his head. He strangled to death slowly over twenty minutes.
On this day..
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- 1726: Thomas Craven and William Anderson, reluctant autobiographers
- 1696: Thomas Randal, obstinate
- 2015: Robert Ladd, "let's ride"
- 1745: Eve, her smoke visible throughout the country
- 1879: John Achey and William Merrick, the first hanged in Indianapolis
- 1253: P. Morret, poor guesser
- 1913: Edward Hopwood, clumsy suicide
- Daily Double: Century-Old English Legal Novelties
- 1912: Albert Wolter, white slaver
- 1869: Chauncey W. Millard, candy man
- 1810: Pedro Domingo Murillo, for Bolivian independence
- 2006: A female spy by al Qaeda
- 1547: Not Thomas Howard, because Henry VIII died first
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