Nineteenth-Century Crime and Punishment
Herausgeber: Bailey, Victor
Nineteenth-Century Crime and Punishment
Herausgeber: Bailey, Victor
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This set presents the essential issues of crime and punishment in the long nineteenth-century. Through the presentation of primary source documents, it explores the development of a modern pattern of crime and a modern system of penal policy and practice.
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This set presents the essential issues of crime and punishment in the long nineteenth-century. Through the presentation of primary source documents, it explores the development of a modern pattern of crime and a modern system of penal policy and practice.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 386
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 717g
- ISBN-13: 9781138587328
- ISBN-10: 113858732X
- Artikelnr.: 69947436
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 386
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 717g
- ISBN-13: 9781138587328
- ISBN-10: 113858732X
- Artikelnr.: 69947436
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Victor Bailey is the Charles W. Battey Distinguished Professor of British History at the University of Kansas, USA
Volume II: Justice
Mercy and Death Part 1. Magistrates and the Sessions' Courts 1. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 24-27; 29-30; 33-35; 37-39. 2. Reginald W. Jeffery
Dyott's Diary 1781-1845 (1907)
vol. 1: 326-7; 332-33; 351; 354-55; 359. Vol. 2: 18-21; 70-71; 95-96; 98-102; 119-20; 172-3; 275-6; 289-91; 298-99. 3. William Hone
The Clerical Magistrate
1819
a coda to The Political House that Jack Built. 4: John Paget
'The London Police Courts'
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
vol. CXVIII
Oct. 1875
pp. 379-389. Part 2. Judges and the Assize Courts 5. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 42-44; 66-69; 87-95; 99; 102-103; 105-7. 6. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
8 May 1799; murder of Bow Street patrol man. Part 3. Prerogative of Mercy 7: Edmund Burke
'Some Thoughts on the Approaching Executions'
Works
vol. V (Boston
1839)
pp. 197-203. 8. Mr. Baron Perryn
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 9. Sir William Ashurst
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 10. Sir James Eyre
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 11. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Death penalty
mercy: TNA
HO6/4. 12. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Imprisonment mercy cases: TNA
HO 6/4. 13. Baron Hotham to Lord Auckland
1800
in J. & Barbara Hammond
The Town Labourer
1st pub. 1917. 14. Mary Thrale (ed.)
The Autobiography of Francis Place (1771-1854)
(Cambridge University Press
1972)
pp. 132-135. 15. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
May 1799
case of Matthew Stinson. 16. The Journal of Mrs Arbuthnot (Duke of Wellington's testimony); and The Greville Diary (Charles Greville): Recorder's Reports; prerogative of mercy
1826 and 1829. 17. Edward Law
Lord Ellenborough
A Political Diary 1828-1830
vol. 1
pp. 154-55; 267-68. 18. Memorandum as to the exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Pardon
8 May 1874; TNA
HO 45/9362/33391. 19. A.G. Gardiner
The Life of Sir William Harcourt (1923)
vol. 1
pp. 399-400. 20. Shane Leslie (compiler)
Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise (1938): the Lipski case
1887
pp. 61-63. Part 4. The Doctrine of Maximum Severity 21. Martin Madan
Appendix to "Thoughts on Executive Justice" occasioned by a Charge to the Grand Jury for the County of Surrey
at the Lent Assizes
1785
by the Hon. Sir Richard Perryn. 22. William Paley
'Of Crimes and Punishments'
in The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy (1785)
pp. 373-393. 23. Sir Samuel Romilly
Observations on the Criminal Law of England as it Relates to Capital Punishments
And On The Mode In Which It Is Administered (London: T. Cadell and W. Davies
1810): substance of a speech delivered in the House of Commons on 9 Feb. 1810
Hansard
vol. 15. Part 5. Public Punishments 24. The Times
17 November 1786
p. 3: whipping in London; death of offender. 25. 'Pillory'
Morning Herald
28 Sept. 1810. 26. The Journal of Samuel Curwen Loyalist
ed by Andrew Oliver (1972)
pp. 774-75. July 1781 27. Rev. J. Leifchild
Remarkable Facts (London
1867)
pp. 219-223. 28. Nottingham execution
1844
TNA
HO45/OS 681. 29. Charles Dickens
letter
The Times
19 Nov. 1849. 30. The Times
Nov. 20
1849
p. 4: defence of public executions. 31. John Ashton
'Life of the Mannings'
Modern Street Ballads (1888)
pp. 368-370. 32. Henry Mayhew
'On Capital Punishments'
in Society for Promoting the Amendment of the Law
Three Papers on Capital Punishment. By Edward Webster
A. H. Dymond
Henry Mayhew. Read at the General Meeting of the Society
Jul 7
1856 (London: Cox (Bros) & Wyman
1856)
pp. 33-36
44-45
46-61. Part 6. Pruning the Fatal Tree 33. Hansard (Lords)
27 Feb. 1812
cols. 966-72
'Frame Work Bill' 34. Lord Byron
'An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill'
Morning Chronicle
2 March 1812. 35. Speech of Thomas Fowell Buxton
'motion for the appointment of a select committee to consider of so much of the Criminal Law as relates to Capital Punishment in Felonies'
Hansard (Commons)
2 March 1819
cols. 806-824. 36. James Mackintosh & Secretary Peel
Hansard
vol. 9
May 21
1823
cols. 408-411; 421-424. 37. Memoirs of Joseph John Gurney
ed. J.B. Braithwaite
vol. 1 (1862)
pp. 120-22 (1816); 395-96 (1829); 412-415 (1830). Part 7. Resisting Abolition 38. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Capital Punishments'
Fraser's Magazine
vol. LXIX
June 1864
pp. 753-764. Part 8. Sentencing 39. Old Bailey Sessions Papers: Joseph Howell (aged 14)
William Harwood (aged 14)
Oct. 1820. 40. Calendar of Prisoners
Liverpool October Sessions
22 Oct. 1849. 41. 'The disproportion between the punishments adjudged to crimes of equal magnitude'
The Times
24 Aug. 1846
p. 4. 42. 'Lord Penzance on sentencing inequality'
Hansard
Lords
4 April 1870
cols.1148
1152-54. 43. Mr. Sergeant Cox
'How far should previous convictions be taken into account in sentencing Criminals?'
Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science
1874
pp. 281-287
297-299
301-303. 44. Du Cane
Chairman of the Prison Commission
to Permanent Under-Secretary of State
Home Office
4 Feb. 1884; Sir William Harcourt to Lord Chancellor. 10 Dec. 1884; Du Cane memo 16 March 1885: TNA
HO45/18479/565861. 45. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Variations in the Punishment of Crime'
Nineteenth Century
vol. XVII
May 1885
pp. 755-776. 46. C. H. Hopwood
'Crime and Punishment'
The New Review
vol. VIII
May 1893
pp. 620-626. 47. The Judges' Memorandum of 1901 on Normal Punishments
in R.M. Jackson
Enforcing the Law (1972)
pp. 391-399.
Mercy and Death Part 1. Magistrates and the Sessions' Courts 1. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 24-27; 29-30; 33-35; 37-39. 2. Reginald W. Jeffery
Dyott's Diary 1781-1845 (1907)
vol. 1: 326-7; 332-33; 351; 354-55; 359. Vol. 2: 18-21; 70-71; 95-96; 98-102; 119-20; 172-3; 275-6; 289-91; 298-99. 3. William Hone
The Clerical Magistrate
1819
a coda to The Political House that Jack Built. 4: John Paget
'The London Police Courts'
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
vol. CXVIII
Oct. 1875
pp. 379-389. Part 2. Judges and the Assize Courts 5. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 42-44; 66-69; 87-95; 99; 102-103; 105-7. 6. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
8 May 1799; murder of Bow Street patrol man. Part 3. Prerogative of Mercy 7: Edmund Burke
'Some Thoughts on the Approaching Executions'
Works
vol. V (Boston
1839)
pp. 197-203. 8. Mr. Baron Perryn
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 9. Sir William Ashurst
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 10. Sir James Eyre
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 11. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Death penalty
mercy: TNA
HO6/4. 12. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Imprisonment mercy cases: TNA
HO 6/4. 13. Baron Hotham to Lord Auckland
1800
in J. & Barbara Hammond
The Town Labourer
1st pub. 1917. 14. Mary Thrale (ed.)
The Autobiography of Francis Place (1771-1854)
(Cambridge University Press
1972)
pp. 132-135. 15. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
May 1799
case of Matthew Stinson. 16. The Journal of Mrs Arbuthnot (Duke of Wellington's testimony); and The Greville Diary (Charles Greville): Recorder's Reports; prerogative of mercy
1826 and 1829. 17. Edward Law
Lord Ellenborough
A Political Diary 1828-1830
vol. 1
pp. 154-55; 267-68. 18. Memorandum as to the exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Pardon
8 May 1874; TNA
HO 45/9362/33391. 19. A.G. Gardiner
The Life of Sir William Harcourt (1923)
vol. 1
pp. 399-400. 20. Shane Leslie (compiler)
Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise (1938): the Lipski case
1887
pp. 61-63. Part 4. The Doctrine of Maximum Severity 21. Martin Madan
Appendix to "Thoughts on Executive Justice" occasioned by a Charge to the Grand Jury for the County of Surrey
at the Lent Assizes
1785
by the Hon. Sir Richard Perryn. 22. William Paley
'Of Crimes and Punishments'
in The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy (1785)
pp. 373-393. 23. Sir Samuel Romilly
Observations on the Criminal Law of England as it Relates to Capital Punishments
And On The Mode In Which It Is Administered (London: T. Cadell and W. Davies
1810): substance of a speech delivered in the House of Commons on 9 Feb. 1810
Hansard
vol. 15. Part 5. Public Punishments 24. The Times
17 November 1786
p. 3: whipping in London; death of offender. 25. 'Pillory'
Morning Herald
28 Sept. 1810. 26. The Journal of Samuel Curwen Loyalist
ed by Andrew Oliver (1972)
pp. 774-75. July 1781 27. Rev. J. Leifchild
Remarkable Facts (London
1867)
pp. 219-223. 28. Nottingham execution
1844
TNA
HO45/OS 681. 29. Charles Dickens
letter
The Times
19 Nov. 1849. 30. The Times
Nov. 20
1849
p. 4: defence of public executions. 31. John Ashton
'Life of the Mannings'
Modern Street Ballads (1888)
pp. 368-370. 32. Henry Mayhew
'On Capital Punishments'
in Society for Promoting the Amendment of the Law
Three Papers on Capital Punishment. By Edward Webster
A. H. Dymond
Henry Mayhew. Read at the General Meeting of the Society
Jul 7
1856 (London: Cox (Bros) & Wyman
1856)
pp. 33-36
44-45
46-61. Part 6. Pruning the Fatal Tree 33. Hansard (Lords)
27 Feb. 1812
cols. 966-72
'Frame Work Bill' 34. Lord Byron
'An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill'
Morning Chronicle
2 March 1812. 35. Speech of Thomas Fowell Buxton
'motion for the appointment of a select committee to consider of so much of the Criminal Law as relates to Capital Punishment in Felonies'
Hansard (Commons)
2 March 1819
cols. 806-824. 36. James Mackintosh & Secretary Peel
Hansard
vol. 9
May 21
1823
cols. 408-411; 421-424. 37. Memoirs of Joseph John Gurney
ed. J.B. Braithwaite
vol. 1 (1862)
pp. 120-22 (1816); 395-96 (1829); 412-415 (1830). Part 7. Resisting Abolition 38. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Capital Punishments'
Fraser's Magazine
vol. LXIX
June 1864
pp. 753-764. Part 8. Sentencing 39. Old Bailey Sessions Papers: Joseph Howell (aged 14)
William Harwood (aged 14)
Oct. 1820. 40. Calendar of Prisoners
Liverpool October Sessions
22 Oct. 1849. 41. 'The disproportion between the punishments adjudged to crimes of equal magnitude'
The Times
24 Aug. 1846
p. 4. 42. 'Lord Penzance on sentencing inequality'
Hansard
Lords
4 April 1870
cols.1148
1152-54. 43. Mr. Sergeant Cox
'How far should previous convictions be taken into account in sentencing Criminals?'
Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science
1874
pp. 281-287
297-299
301-303. 44. Du Cane
Chairman of the Prison Commission
to Permanent Under-Secretary of State
Home Office
4 Feb. 1884; Sir William Harcourt to Lord Chancellor. 10 Dec. 1884; Du Cane memo 16 March 1885: TNA
HO45/18479/565861. 45. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Variations in the Punishment of Crime'
Nineteenth Century
vol. XVII
May 1885
pp. 755-776. 46. C. H. Hopwood
'Crime and Punishment'
The New Review
vol. VIII
May 1893
pp. 620-626. 47. The Judges' Memorandum of 1901 on Normal Punishments
in R.M. Jackson
Enforcing the Law (1972)
pp. 391-399.
Volume II: Justice
Mercy and Death Part 1. Magistrates and the Sessions' Courts 1. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 24-27; 29-30; 33-35; 37-39. 2. Reginald W. Jeffery
Dyott's Diary 1781-1845 (1907)
vol. 1: 326-7; 332-33; 351; 354-55; 359. Vol. 2: 18-21; 70-71; 95-96; 98-102; 119-20; 172-3; 275-6; 289-91; 298-99. 3. William Hone
The Clerical Magistrate
1819
a coda to The Political House that Jack Built. 4: John Paget
'The London Police Courts'
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
vol. CXVIII
Oct. 1875
pp. 379-389. Part 2. Judges and the Assize Courts 5. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 42-44; 66-69; 87-95; 99; 102-103; 105-7. 6. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
8 May 1799; murder of Bow Street patrol man. Part 3. Prerogative of Mercy 7: Edmund Burke
'Some Thoughts on the Approaching Executions'
Works
vol. V (Boston
1839)
pp. 197-203. 8. Mr. Baron Perryn
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 9. Sir William Ashurst
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 10. Sir James Eyre
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 11. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Death penalty
mercy: TNA
HO6/4. 12. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Imprisonment mercy cases: TNA
HO 6/4. 13. Baron Hotham to Lord Auckland
1800
in J. & Barbara Hammond
The Town Labourer
1st pub. 1917. 14. Mary Thrale (ed.)
The Autobiography of Francis Place (1771-1854)
(Cambridge University Press
1972)
pp. 132-135. 15. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
May 1799
case of Matthew Stinson. 16. The Journal of Mrs Arbuthnot (Duke of Wellington's testimony); and The Greville Diary (Charles Greville): Recorder's Reports; prerogative of mercy
1826 and 1829. 17. Edward Law
Lord Ellenborough
A Political Diary 1828-1830
vol. 1
pp. 154-55; 267-68. 18. Memorandum as to the exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Pardon
8 May 1874; TNA
HO 45/9362/33391. 19. A.G. Gardiner
The Life of Sir William Harcourt (1923)
vol. 1
pp. 399-400. 20. Shane Leslie (compiler)
Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise (1938): the Lipski case
1887
pp. 61-63. Part 4. The Doctrine of Maximum Severity 21. Martin Madan
Appendix to "Thoughts on Executive Justice" occasioned by a Charge to the Grand Jury for the County of Surrey
at the Lent Assizes
1785
by the Hon. Sir Richard Perryn. 22. William Paley
'Of Crimes and Punishments'
in The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy (1785)
pp. 373-393. 23. Sir Samuel Romilly
Observations on the Criminal Law of England as it Relates to Capital Punishments
And On The Mode In Which It Is Administered (London: T. Cadell and W. Davies
1810): substance of a speech delivered in the House of Commons on 9 Feb. 1810
Hansard
vol. 15. Part 5. Public Punishments 24. The Times
17 November 1786
p. 3: whipping in London; death of offender. 25. 'Pillory'
Morning Herald
28 Sept. 1810. 26. The Journal of Samuel Curwen Loyalist
ed by Andrew Oliver (1972)
pp. 774-75. July 1781 27. Rev. J. Leifchild
Remarkable Facts (London
1867)
pp. 219-223. 28. Nottingham execution
1844
TNA
HO45/OS 681. 29. Charles Dickens
letter
The Times
19 Nov. 1849. 30. The Times
Nov. 20
1849
p. 4: defence of public executions. 31. John Ashton
'Life of the Mannings'
Modern Street Ballads (1888)
pp. 368-370. 32. Henry Mayhew
'On Capital Punishments'
in Society for Promoting the Amendment of the Law
Three Papers on Capital Punishment. By Edward Webster
A. H. Dymond
Henry Mayhew. Read at the General Meeting of the Society
Jul 7
1856 (London: Cox (Bros) & Wyman
1856)
pp. 33-36
44-45
46-61. Part 6. Pruning the Fatal Tree 33. Hansard (Lords)
27 Feb. 1812
cols. 966-72
'Frame Work Bill' 34. Lord Byron
'An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill'
Morning Chronicle
2 March 1812. 35. Speech of Thomas Fowell Buxton
'motion for the appointment of a select committee to consider of so much of the Criminal Law as relates to Capital Punishment in Felonies'
Hansard (Commons)
2 March 1819
cols. 806-824. 36. James Mackintosh & Secretary Peel
Hansard
vol. 9
May 21
1823
cols. 408-411; 421-424. 37. Memoirs of Joseph John Gurney
ed. J.B. Braithwaite
vol. 1 (1862)
pp. 120-22 (1816); 395-96 (1829); 412-415 (1830). Part 7. Resisting Abolition 38. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Capital Punishments'
Fraser's Magazine
vol. LXIX
June 1864
pp. 753-764. Part 8. Sentencing 39. Old Bailey Sessions Papers: Joseph Howell (aged 14)
William Harwood (aged 14)
Oct. 1820. 40. Calendar of Prisoners
Liverpool October Sessions
22 Oct. 1849. 41. 'The disproportion between the punishments adjudged to crimes of equal magnitude'
The Times
24 Aug. 1846
p. 4. 42. 'Lord Penzance on sentencing inequality'
Hansard
Lords
4 April 1870
cols.1148
1152-54. 43. Mr. Sergeant Cox
'How far should previous convictions be taken into account in sentencing Criminals?'
Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science
1874
pp. 281-287
297-299
301-303. 44. Du Cane
Chairman of the Prison Commission
to Permanent Under-Secretary of State
Home Office
4 Feb. 1884; Sir William Harcourt to Lord Chancellor. 10 Dec. 1884; Du Cane memo 16 March 1885: TNA
HO45/18479/565861. 45. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Variations in the Punishment of Crime'
Nineteenth Century
vol. XVII
May 1885
pp. 755-776. 46. C. H. Hopwood
'Crime and Punishment'
The New Review
vol. VIII
May 1893
pp. 620-626. 47. The Judges' Memorandum of 1901 on Normal Punishments
in R.M. Jackson
Enforcing the Law (1972)
pp. 391-399.
Mercy and Death Part 1. Magistrates and the Sessions' Courts 1. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 24-27; 29-30; 33-35; 37-39. 2. Reginald W. Jeffery
Dyott's Diary 1781-1845 (1907)
vol. 1: 326-7; 332-33; 351; 354-55; 359. Vol. 2: 18-21; 70-71; 95-96; 98-102; 119-20; 172-3; 275-6; 289-91; 298-99. 3. William Hone
The Clerical Magistrate
1819
a coda to The Political House that Jack Built. 4: John Paget
'The London Police Courts'
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
vol. CXVIII
Oct. 1875
pp. 379-389. Part 2. Judges and the Assize Courts 5. Charles Cottu
On the Administration of Criminal Justice in England (1822)
pp. 42-44; 66-69; 87-95; 99; 102-103; 105-7. 6. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
8 May 1799; murder of Bow Street patrol man. Part 3. Prerogative of Mercy 7: Edmund Burke
'Some Thoughts on the Approaching Executions'
Works
vol. V (Boston
1839)
pp. 197-203. 8. Mr. Baron Perryn
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 9. Sir William Ashurst
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 10. Sir James Eyre
mercy
death penalty
1787: TNA
HO47/6: Judges' Reports. 11. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Death penalty
mercy: TNA
HO6/4. 12. Letters written by Circuit Judges
1819. Imprisonment mercy cases: TNA
HO 6/4. 13. Baron Hotham to Lord Auckland
1800
in J. & Barbara Hammond
The Town Labourer
1st pub. 1917. 14. Mary Thrale (ed.)
The Autobiography of Francis Place (1771-1854)
(Cambridge University Press
1972)
pp. 132-135. 15. Old Bailey Sessions Papers
May 1799
case of Matthew Stinson. 16. The Journal of Mrs Arbuthnot (Duke of Wellington's testimony); and The Greville Diary (Charles Greville): Recorder's Reports; prerogative of mercy
1826 and 1829. 17. Edward Law
Lord Ellenborough
A Political Diary 1828-1830
vol. 1
pp. 154-55; 267-68. 18. Memorandum as to the exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Pardon
8 May 1874; TNA
HO 45/9362/33391. 19. A.G. Gardiner
The Life of Sir William Harcourt (1923)
vol. 1
pp. 399-400. 20. Shane Leslie (compiler)
Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise (1938): the Lipski case
1887
pp. 61-63. Part 4. The Doctrine of Maximum Severity 21. Martin Madan
Appendix to "Thoughts on Executive Justice" occasioned by a Charge to the Grand Jury for the County of Surrey
at the Lent Assizes
1785
by the Hon. Sir Richard Perryn. 22. William Paley
'Of Crimes and Punishments'
in The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy (1785)
pp. 373-393. 23. Sir Samuel Romilly
Observations on the Criminal Law of England as it Relates to Capital Punishments
And On The Mode In Which It Is Administered (London: T. Cadell and W. Davies
1810): substance of a speech delivered in the House of Commons on 9 Feb. 1810
Hansard
vol. 15. Part 5. Public Punishments 24. The Times
17 November 1786
p. 3: whipping in London; death of offender. 25. 'Pillory'
Morning Herald
28 Sept. 1810. 26. The Journal of Samuel Curwen Loyalist
ed by Andrew Oliver (1972)
pp. 774-75. July 1781 27. Rev. J. Leifchild
Remarkable Facts (London
1867)
pp. 219-223. 28. Nottingham execution
1844
TNA
HO45/OS 681. 29. Charles Dickens
letter
The Times
19 Nov. 1849. 30. The Times
Nov. 20
1849
p. 4: defence of public executions. 31. John Ashton
'Life of the Mannings'
Modern Street Ballads (1888)
pp. 368-370. 32. Henry Mayhew
'On Capital Punishments'
in Society for Promoting the Amendment of the Law
Three Papers on Capital Punishment. By Edward Webster
A. H. Dymond
Henry Mayhew. Read at the General Meeting of the Society
Jul 7
1856 (London: Cox (Bros) & Wyman
1856)
pp. 33-36
44-45
46-61. Part 6. Pruning the Fatal Tree 33. Hansard (Lords)
27 Feb. 1812
cols. 966-72
'Frame Work Bill' 34. Lord Byron
'An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill'
Morning Chronicle
2 March 1812. 35. Speech of Thomas Fowell Buxton
'motion for the appointment of a select committee to consider of so much of the Criminal Law as relates to Capital Punishment in Felonies'
Hansard (Commons)
2 March 1819
cols. 806-824. 36. James Mackintosh & Secretary Peel
Hansard
vol. 9
May 21
1823
cols. 408-411; 421-424. 37. Memoirs of Joseph John Gurney
ed. J.B. Braithwaite
vol. 1 (1862)
pp. 120-22 (1816); 395-96 (1829); 412-415 (1830). Part 7. Resisting Abolition 38. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Capital Punishments'
Fraser's Magazine
vol. LXIX
June 1864
pp. 753-764. Part 8. Sentencing 39. Old Bailey Sessions Papers: Joseph Howell (aged 14)
William Harwood (aged 14)
Oct. 1820. 40. Calendar of Prisoners
Liverpool October Sessions
22 Oct. 1849. 41. 'The disproportion between the punishments adjudged to crimes of equal magnitude'
The Times
24 Aug. 1846
p. 4. 42. 'Lord Penzance on sentencing inequality'
Hansard
Lords
4 April 1870
cols.1148
1152-54. 43. Mr. Sergeant Cox
'How far should previous convictions be taken into account in sentencing Criminals?'
Transactions of the National Association for the Promotion of Social Science
1874
pp. 281-287
297-299
301-303. 44. Du Cane
Chairman of the Prison Commission
to Permanent Under-Secretary of State
Home Office
4 Feb. 1884; Sir William Harcourt to Lord Chancellor. 10 Dec. 1884; Du Cane memo 16 March 1885: TNA
HO45/18479/565861. 45. James Fitzjames Stephen
'Variations in the Punishment of Crime'
Nineteenth Century
vol. XVII
May 1885
pp. 755-776. 46. C. H. Hopwood
'Crime and Punishment'
The New Review
vol. VIII
May 1893
pp. 620-626. 47. The Judges' Memorandum of 1901 on Normal Punishments
in R.M. Jackson
Enforcing the Law (1972)
pp. 391-399.