THE TYBURN TREE


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The popular rebel leader William Fitz Osbert was captured by troops acting on behalf of the Archbishop of Canterbury and dragged to a dusty junction by a small stream in the manor of Tyburn on the outskirts of London.

Among them Roger Mortimer, the first Earl of March, Richard III supporter Sir Humphrey Stafford, and the royal pretender, Perkin Warbeck.

Some, such as the unfortunate Francis Dereham, suffered a horrifying end at Tyburn.
Found guilty of sleeping with Henry VIII’s fifth wife, Catherine Howard, Dereham was dragged to Tyburn where he was hanged until he was barely conscious.
He was then taken down, his genitals cut off, his stomach sliced open and his bowels ripped out while he was still alive.
Finally, he was bEheaded and his body cut into quarters to be displayed to the public, as a warning to all those who thought of defying the king.

Known as the ‘Tyburn Tree’, the gallows consisted of a horizontal wooden triangle supported on three legs and were used for multiple executions.
This unusual design allowed for 24 prisoners to be executed at the same time - a grisly spectacle that delighted the hollering crowds who gathered for every exEcution.

Hundreds of shouting, jeering, often drunk Londoners gathered to catch a glimpse of the condemned prisoners as they made their way from Newgate Prison to the Tyburn Tree.
Among the crowds wandered gang members, muggers and pickpockets - ironically, the place that hanged petty criminals became a hotbed of petty crime.

Despite being just three miles from Newgate, the journey to Tyburn usually took about three hours, thanks to the crowds blocking the streets along the way.
Before reaching their destination, the cart often stopped at the Bowl Inn in St. Giles, where prisoners were allowed to drink strong liquor or wine to help them steel themselves for what awaited them.

Those that could afford it paid for a seat in stands that were erected for the occasion.

‘Doing the Tyburn Jig’ was the euphemism coined for the dance the prisoners unwillingly performed as they hung from the gallows.
The crowd occasionally took pity on them and pulled their legs to quickly snap their necks.

The Tyburn Tree was dismantled in 1759, after which a portable gallows was wheeled out for public executions.
The highwayman John Austin became the last man to be executed at Tyburn in November 1783.
After that, hangings took place outside Newgate Prison until 1868 when executions were moved inside the prison, away from the prying eyes of the public.
It was the end of a very bloody era.

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