The First Execution by Electric Chair
William Kemmler was killed on August 6th, 1890.
William Kemmler was killed on August 6th, 1890.
A notorious mass murderer was sentenced to death on July 1st 1915.
How do you avoid glorifying the acts of criminals?
This is an extract from Anna Field’s ‘Masculinity and Myth’, which won the 2014 History Today undergraduate dissertation prize, awarded in conjunction with the Royal Historical Society.
Eynon Smart traces the career of ‘that famous Cheat’, Mary Carleton, known to the Restoration world as ‘the German Princess’.
T.H. Corfe analyses a double assassination in Dublin that long left its scar on Anglo-Irish relations.
A gifted utilitarian, and sometime Member of Parliament, Douglas Hurd writes that John Bowring spent ten tumultuous years in China where he believed in supporting the cause of progress with British gunboats.
The stigma of illegitimacy forced many women in Victorian Britain to hand over their babies to adopters or ‘baby farmers’. Barbara Butcher tells the story of Amelia Dyer, who killed numerous infants she was paid to care for.
Tim Stanley draws parallels between a New York gang war of the 1900s and an act of horrific violence in south London.
Roderick Cameron explains how, during the 50 years that followed Governor Phillip’s landing at Botany Bay in 1788, convicts and free settlers turned New South Wales into a flourishing colony.