On this date in 1862, Mary Timney was hanged at Buccleuch Street in Dumfries, Scotland.
The penniless 27-year-old occupied the stone cottage adjacent to her victim’s way out in the countryside at Carsphad — near the fringe of present-day Galloway Forest Park. Timney was Ann Hannah’s tenant, but the two were known to have a fractious relationship and often cross words. Timney had borrowed so often that Hannah grew deaf to her importunities; Hannah suspected Timney of stealing firewood, and Timney suspected Hannah of stealing her husband’s caresses.
On January 13, 1862, Hannah was discovered breathing her last on that cottage floor in a puddle of her own blood, splatters of which also decorated the little home like a slasher movie. The obvious suspect had some incriminating bloodstains on her person. Timney claimed that Hannah started the fight by kicking the younger woman, and in the ensuing fracas Timney grabbed the weapons ready to hand (a knife, a poker, and a wooden mallet: seems like more than you’d need) and mauled her neighbor to death.
“Oh, my Lord, dinna do that,” Timney cried out in court when the judge donned the black cap to impose her death sentence. “Give me anything but that, let the Lord send for me!”
Mary Timney was initially regarded by her former neighbors in Carsphad as a monster. But as her execution approached, sentiment underwent a surprising reversal. The pathos of leaving the young woman’s four children motherless, or else the simple discomfiture of publicly swinging a woman from the gallows-tree,* soon led to a strong local push for mercy. “The great majority of the public of Dumfries were horrified and indignant that this butchery should be permitted in their streets,” one paper reported.
The Crown saw no grounds to extend it, and swore in an extra 200 constables to manage the crowd.
In a stateof near collapse, Mary Timney went to the gallows this date before 3,000 solemn spectators. She was still pleading. “Oh no, no, no! My four weans, my four weans.” (See this book)
The scene appalled everyone so entirely that it was never repeated: Mary Timney was the last woman publicly executed in Scottish history.
Coincidentally, Dumfries would also have the distinction — on May 12, 1868 — of hosting the last legal public hanging of a male offender, shortly before Parliament moved all UK executions behind prison walls.
There’s a recent book about Mary Timney’s case which appears easier to find stocked in Britain than stateside.
* Scottish streets at this moment had not witnessed any woman’s hanging for nearly a decade.
On this day..
- 1972: King Ntare V of Burundi
- 1947: Karel Čurda and Viliam Gerik, Czechoslovakia resistance betrayers
- 1774: Daniel Wilson
- 2014: Two crucifixions in Raqqa
- 1836: Isaac Young/Heller, axman
- 2015: Eight drug smugglers in Indonesia
- 998: Crescentius the Younger
- 1945: Dachau Massacre
- 1951: Ospan Batyr, Kazakh freedom fighter
- 1968: Lin Zhao, martyr poet
- 1676: Anna Zippel, Brita Zippel and the body of Anna Mansdotter
- 1818: Alexander Arbuthnot and Richard Ambrister