<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller">Incidents and Anecdotes.</span></h2>
<div class="drop">
<ANTIMG src="images/dropa.png" width-obs="73" height-obs="76" alt="A" /></div>
<p class="afterdrop"><span class="fstwd"><span class="hidden">A</span>s</span> is always the case when a man attains any
prominence or notoriety, a number of utterly
groundless stories have got afloat about my
doings and adventures. Others, which were originally
founded on fact, have been so modified and altered that
I do not recognise them when they come back to me
again. Altogether I have been credited with being the
hero of so many surprising adventures that I am afraid
the few little incidents which have really occurred to
me will seem tame by the side of the fictions.</p>
<p>One of the most striking incidents that ever occurred
to me was on the journey from Lincoln to Durham,
after executing Mary Lefley, in 1884. At Doncaster
we changed from the Great Eastern to the Great
Northern Railway. I looked out for a carriage with a
vacant corner seat, and got into one containing three
rough-looking men. When the train had started they
began to talk amongst themselves, and to look at me, and
eventually began to chaff me. Of course I pretended
not to understand their allusions to the execution that
morning, and was indignant at their supposing me to
be an executioner, but they were confident that they were
right, and began offering to bet amongst themselves as
to which of them I should get first. I was glad to get
to York, where I parted from their company. Two
years afterwards I met the same three men under very
different circumstances. They were at Carlisle, condemned
to be executed for the Netherby Hall burglary,
and I carried out the sentence of the law. Their names
were Rudge, Martin, and Baker.</p>
<p>I always try to remain unknown while travelling,
but there is a certain class of people who will always
crowd round as if an executioner were a peep-show.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span>
On the journey above mentioned, after changing at
York, I got into a carriage with a benevolent-looking
old gentleman. A little crowd collected round the door,
and just as we were starting a porter stuck his head
into the window, pointed to my fellow-passenger, and
with a silly attempt at jocularity said:—“I hope you’ll
give him the right tightener.” The old gentleman
seemed much mystified, and of course I was quite
unable to imagine what it meant. At Darlington there
was another little crowd, which collected for a short
time about our carriage. Fortunately none of the
people knew me, so that when the old gentleman asked
them what was the matter they could only tell him that
Berry was travelling by that train and that they wanted
to have a look at him. The old gentleman seemed
anxious to see such an awful man as the executioner,
and asked me if I should know him if I saw him. I
pointed out a low-looking character as being possibly
the man, and my fellow-traveller said, “Yes! very
much like him.” I suppose he had seen a so-called
portrait of me in one of the newspapers. We got quite
friendly, and when we reached Durham, where I was
getting out, he asked for my card. The reader can
imagine his surprise when I handed it to him.</p>
<p>This little story has been much warped and magnified,
and has even been made the subject of a leading
article which takes me to task for “glorying in my
gruesome calling,” and shocking respectable people by
giving them my cards.</p>
<p>Another little anecdote which has been greatly
distorted is what I call the toothache story. It happened
in 1887, when crossing from Ireland, that there was one
of the passengers who was terribly ill with mal de mer
and toothache combined. He was rather a bother to
several travellers who were not sick, and who wished to
enjoy the voyage, and he must have given a lot of
trouble to the stewards. I think that one of the latter
must have told him that I could cure him, for he came
and begged me to tell him what was the best thing for
his complaint. I admitted that I was in the habit of
giving drops that would instantaneously cure both the
toothache and the sea-sickness, but assured him that he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>
would not be willing to take my remedy. Still he persisted,
so I handed him a card, and as he was a sensitive
man it gave his nerves a shock that was quite sufficient
to relieve him of the toothache, and me of his presence
for the rest of the voyage. As the card which I then used
has often been mentioned in the newspapers, I give a
fac-simile of it. The wording was in black, with the
fern in green, and the border in gold. I now use a
perfectly plain card, as reproduced on <SPAN href="#Page_117">page 117</SPAN>.</p>
<div class="center">
<ANTIMG src="images/card2.png" width-obs="543" height-obs="325" alt="" /></div>
<p>A sad little incident in connection with the murder
of Warder Webb by John Jackson will always remain
in my memory. I had been to Strangeways Gaol once
or twice before on duty, and Webb had always been
my personal attendant during my residence, so that we
were quite friendly. At the execution previous to
Jackson’s—that of John Alfred Gell, in May, 1888—we
had two or three long chats, and Webb was most
anxious that I should go to Manchester to spend a half-day
or a day with him in the city, when he could get
leave of absence. He hoped it would be a long time
before they should see me there again professionally,
but said that they would always be glad to see me if I
were in Manchester on other business, and could call.
Then, turning to the subject of executions, he began
wondering who would be the next that I should have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span>
to go there for, and who would be the victim, and
shaking his head sadly, he said, “A body never knows
who will be next.” The poor fellow little thought that
he would be the next victim, and that the very next
time I visited Strangeways would be no friendly call,
but a visit to avenge his own death.</p>
<p>Of course, my duties take me about the country a
great deal, and I have met a great many interesting
people in the course of my travels. As a rule, I do not
make myself known unless I have some good reason for
doing so, because I have no fancy for making myself
into a cheap show. On one occasion I travelled from
Coventry to Warwick with the reporter of one of the
Coventry papers. He knew nothing of my identity,
and does not seem to have recognised me at the
execution; but while writing out his report the
connection between the gentleman in the train and the
executioner in the gaol seems to have dawned upon
him, and he wrote the following, which amused me
greatly when it appeared in his paper:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>After writing this report and describing the
hangman’s features and dress, it dawned upon the
writer for the first time that the description was that
of a gentleman with whom he had travelled from
Coventry to Warwick on the previous afternoon. On
reflecting upon all the circumstances of the journey,
he felt quite certain of the fact; and although amused
at the thought of having travelled and conversed
with an executioner without knowing it, he was a
little chagrined that he had not given the conversation
a “professional” turn, which he would have done
had he been aware who his fellow traveller was. The
incident is sufficient to show that persons travelling
by rail occasionally get into singular company without
having the slightest knowledge of the fact.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In 1887 when I had to go to Dorchester, to hang
Henry William Young for the Poole murder, I stayed
at Bournemouth, and took a room in a Temperance
Hotel. During the evening I got into conversation
with the landlady, who was much interested in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>
subject of executions, and who appeared to like to
discuss it. She was decidedly “down on” Berry, “the
hangsman,” and expressed herself very freely as to
his character and disposition; amongst other pleasant
things, saying that he was a man without a soul, and
not fit to have intercourse with respectable people. Of
course, I smilingly agreed with everything that she had
to say, and chuckled quietly to myself about a little
surprise that I had in store for her. The surprise came
off at bed-time, when she handed me my bedroom
candle, and in return I handed her my card. The
good lady nearly fainted.</p>
<p>It is not often that I feel frightened, for I am pretty
well able to take care of myself, but I once had a little
adventure in the train, coming from Galway to Dublin,
that gave me one or two cold shivers. It was at a time
when Ireland was much disturbed by agrarian outrages,
and I knew that amongst some of the lower classes
there was a feeling of hatred against myself on account
of my occupation. Of this I had an example when
going down <i>to</i> Galway, and as it led up to, and somewhat
prepared me for the other incident, I may as well
mention it. My journey to Galway was undertaken for
the purpose of hanging four men who were condemned
to death for moonlighting. It was an exciting journey
altogether, for four men who were in the same compartment
as myself from Dublin to Mullingar got into an
excited discussion upon some political subject, and just
as we left Killucan they began to fight most violently,
using their sticks and fists to such an extent that all
their faces were soon covered with blood. As the train
drew into Mullingar the fury cooled as quickly as it had
begun, they all began to apologise to each other and
wipe the blood from one another’s faces. At Mullingar
I got out for a drink, to steady my nerves, for the fight
at such close quarters had somewhat upset me, although
I took no part in it. On the platform two villainously
rough-looking characters spoke a few words to the men
who had got out of my compartment and then followed
me into the refreshment room, where they seemed
anxious to make my acquaintance, and so forcibly
insisted that I should have a drink with them, that I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span>
had to consent for fear of causing a row. They asked
me where I was going, said that they were going to
Galway, and in what seemed to me a peculiarly significant
tone, asked me if I knew whether Mr. Barry, the
hangsman, was really in the train or not. They followed
me on to the platform like two shadows, and got into
the same compartment of the train. All this made me
feel rather uncomfortable, for though I was well armed,
there is nothing in life that I dread so much as the
possibility of having to kill a man in self-defence and of
being tried, and possibly convicted, for murder. I was,
therefore, very pleased when two plain-clothes men
whom I knew belonged to the Royal Irish Constabulary,
got into the other half of the carriage, which was one
of those in which there are two compartments divided
by a low partition. I do not know whether my two
rough companions even noticed that there was anyone
in the other half of the carriage, to which their backs
were turned. Their conduct, indeed, seemed to show
that they thought we were alone, but I could see that
the R. I. C. men were regarding them with interest and
taking note of every word they said. All the way from
Mullingar to Athenry the two fellows plied me with
questions, and tried by all means in their power to draw
me into discussion, and the expression of opinion. I
answered them as briefly as I could without being
uncivil, but took care that they should not gain much
solid information from my answers. At Athenry they
shuffled into the far corner of the compartment, and in
stage whispers, which they evidently thought I could not
hear, argued as to whether I was “Barry” or not. One
of them got quite excited, pointed out that I was an
Englishman, that I came from the North of England,
that there was no one else in the train that looked like
an executioner, that my tale about being a poultry-buyer
was “all a loie,” and finally that I had a scar on my
cheek which “proved it intoirely, begorra!” The other
fellow said that “shure the gintleman in the corner was
a gintleman, and not a murtherin, blood-thirsty, blagyard
of a hangman,” which opinion at last seemed to be
shared by both. As we steamed into Galway I used
my handkerchief, and then rested my hand on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>
window-ledge with the handkerchief hanging out. This
was the signal arranged with my police escort, who were
on the platform, and who managed to be just opposite
the door when the train stopped. As I marched off
amongst those strapping fellows, I looked round to see
my two travelling companions gesticulating wildly, and
abusing each other for having been deceived, and for
having treated “the very blagyard we went to meet.”
I never knew whether they had intended me any harm,
but the constabulary men told me that they were two of
the roughest characters in Galway.</p>
<p>The four men who were condemned to death were
reprieved, one after the other, as the days fixed for their
executions drew near, so that I was not required to
carry out my painful duty after all. But I was kept
waiting more than a week in Galway gaol, with nothing
more lively to do than to read the newspapers, and to
walk about in the dreary prison yard, because the
governor did not consider that it would be safe for me
to venture outside. I was heartily glad when the last
reprieve arrived and I was free to return home. To
avoid observation as much as possible, I took the midnight
train, and as there were very few passengers I
secured a compartment to myself, and made all snug
for a sleep. I was not disturbed until we reached
Mullingar, when I noticed a man who looked into my
compartment, then walked the whole length of the train,
and finally came into my compartment, although there
were others in the train quite empty. He at once
began to talk to me in a friendly sort of style, with a
strong American twang, but I did not like his looks at
all, so pretended to want to go to sleep. As I sized
him up from my half-shut lids I set him down as a
“heavy swell” Yankee. He wore a big slouch hat and
cape coat, carried an elaborately silver-mounted handbag,
and his coat pocket showed the unmistakable
outline of a revolver. He plied me with all sorts of
questions on Irish politics, asked me where I lived,
what was my business, where I was going to stay in
Dublin, and a host of other questions which I evaded
as far as I decently could. I did tell him, amongst
other things, that my name was Aykroyd, and that I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>
lived in the North of England, but not very much
beyond this. After a while he pulled out his revolver
and commenced examining it in a careless sort of
fashion. As I did not like this turn of affairs, I pulled
out my own weapon, which was built for business and
twice the size of the one carried by the stranger, and
made a pretence of looking it over very carefully. The
stranger asked me to let him examine my “gun,” but
I told him that it was a weapon that I did not like to
hand about for fear of accidents, and after a final look
at the charges, I put it back into my coat pocket in
such a position that it covered the stranger, and kept
my finger on the trigger until we reached Dublin. The
American tried to keep up a conversation all the way,
but I was not very encouraging, and I thought that by
the time we reached Dublin he would be heartily sick
of my company. But when I got out of the station
and was driving off to my hotel, I was surprised to find
that he jumped on to the same car, and said he would
go to the same hotel as I did. After having a wash I
came down into the breakfast room and heard the
American asking the waitress if she knew Mr. Berry, to
which she replied that she did; and then if Mr. Berry
was there that morning, to which she replied that she
had not seen him. As a matter of fact she had not, and
I slipped along the passage to tell her, as she went to
the kitchen, that my name, <i>pro tem</i>, was Aykroyd.
I found in the coffee room that there was a letter
addressed to me, on the mantel-piece. The stranger
was examining this, and asked me if I knew the hangman
by sight. When it was nearly time to catch my
boat the stranger still stuck to me, and at the last
moment he suggested that we should have a drink together.
We went to Mooney’s, where I was known to
the bar-tender, to whom I tipped a vigorous wink as we
went in, which showed him there was something in the
wind. After ordering our drinks the American asked
him if he knew Berry, the hangman, to which he truthfully
replied that he did. The American then asked if
he knew whether Berry had come from Galway by the
night mail, adding “he was expected to travel by that
train, but Mr. Aykroyd and myself came by it and we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span>
saw nobody like him, though I carefully looked along
the whole train.” The bar-tender of course knew
nothing, so we drank up, and I went out to my car, the
American shaking hands with me and wishing me a
pleasant voyage. I had run it rather close, and quick
driving only just brought us to the quay in time for me
to get aboard. As the ship swung out from the quay-side,
a car, driven at red-hot speed, came dashing along, and
the passenger, whom I recognised as my American,
gesticulated wildly, as if he wanted the vessel to stop.
But we swung out with steam and tide, and he drove
some distance along the quay-sides wildly but vainly
waving his hands.</p>
<p>The next time I was at Mooney’s I heard some
further particulars. The stranger had gone back for
another drink, and after chatting for a few minutes, the
bar-tender told him that his friend Mr. Aykroyd was
the very Berry for whom he had been enquiring. On
hearing that, he rapped out half-a-dozen oaths, rushed
for a car, and drove off in mad haste.</p>
<p>I have never seen him since, nor has the bar-tender,
and I never knew what were the motives for his peculiar
conduct.</p>
<div class="enddeco">
<ANTIMG src="images/end11.png" width-obs="137" height-obs="139" alt="" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="Appendix" id="Appendix">Appendix.</SPAN><br/> <span class="smaller"><span class="smcap">The Trouble with “Answers” Limited.</span></span></h2>
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<p class="afterdrop"><span class="fstwd"><span class="hidden">E</span>arly</span> last year (1890) I felt compelled to bring
an action for libel against the “Answers”
Newspaper Co., Ltd. As the case was fully
reported at the time, I think that a report condensed
from the columns of <i>The Bradford Observer</i>, of March 17th,
1890, may be more satisfactory than my own statement
of the case. I, therefore, give it, in the form of an
appendix, rather than in the chapter—“<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII">The Press and
the Public</SPAN>”—to which it belongs.</p>
<p>In this action Mr. Waddy, Q.C., M.P., and Mr.
Waugh (instructed by Mr. J. J. Wright) appeared for
the plaintiff, Mr. James Berry, the public executioner,
of 1, Bilton Place, Bradford; and Mr. Cyril Dodd, Q.C.,
appeared for the defendants, the “Answers” Newspaper
Company, Limited. The plaintiff claimed £500 for
libel, which was printed and published in the periodical
called “Answers;” the defendants admitted the printing
and publication of the libel, and by way of mitigation of
damages they withdrew all moral imputations against
Berry’s character and paid a sum of 40s. into court, and
apologised for the words used.</p>
<p>Mr. Waddy said in behalf of the plaintiff—and he
thought the observation would commend itself to their
judgment—that no man in the kingdom, whatever he
might be, and whatever calling he might follow, as long
as he followed the duties of his calling in honesty and
integrity, ought to be deliberately insulted and flouted
for any reason whatever; and he believed that when
they heard what kinds of falsehoods were printed concerning
Berry they would agree with him that Mr.
Berry, although he was the common executioner, being
a sober and respectable man, was entitled at their hands
to be protected from wanton insult. He would tell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</SPAN></span>
them what the facts were. It appeared that some time
in September or October of 1889 a man named White
came to him representing himself to be a correspondent
of an American newspaper, and told Mr. Berry that he
was anxious to hear his views upon the very interesting
subject of executions by means of electricity, and that
his opinion, in view of his experience at executions, was
of very great importance. He offered Mr. Berry a fee
of £3 if he would give him the interview which he
desired; and that fee was paid, and Mr. Berry did
discuss the question with him. He did that on the
promise, both by word of mouth and in writing, that
whatever he said should not be published in this
country. Mr. Waddy then read the article which had
appeared in “Answers,” from which I need only give
extracts.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>He is a powerful, thick-set man, of about medium
stature, and his countenance is not an unpleasant one
at a first glance, though upon closer study one discovers
that the face reveals the lack of several moral
elements in the man’s composition, which seems to
indicate that the Creator designed him especially for
the ends he serves.</p>
<p>A critical observer would probably say that his
eyes are too close together, and that their brilliancy
is that of the codfish rather than the eagle, while,
though the mouth and chin indicate determination,
the forehead gives the impression of lack of balance.</p>
<p>A phrenologist would perhaps find that the
cranial bumps that indicate sense and shame, pity
and sympathy, are not particularly well developed
upon the head of Mr. Berry.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>“Have you ever been threatened by the friends
of criminals whom you have hanged?”</p>
<p>“Often,” replied Mr. Berry, “but I don’t pay no
attention to them. I’m a doin’ o’ my duty, and I’m
protected by th’ Government.”</p>
<p>“It was said that if Mrs. Maybrick had not been
reprieved a mob would have been formed in Liverpool
to prevent your hanging her.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“They’d never have seen me,” said Mr. Berry,
“I’d ’a been in th’ jail and ’anged her before th’ mob
knew I was about, and I’d been on th’ train and on my
way back ’ome before they knew she was dead. Why
when I ’anged Poole in Dublin, who murdered
informer Kenny—O’Donnell, who murdered th’ other
informer, Carey, having been ’anged at Newgate th’
day before—there was a great mob in Dublin to prevent
my getting into th’ prison, and nobody outside
knew Poole was ’anged until I was on th’ boat a
steaming away for Holyhead.”</p>
<p>“How do you manage that?” I asked again.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you,” said Mr. Berry in a burst of confidence.
“I shaves off my whiskers and I puts on
women’s clothes. That’s th’ way I got into Dublin
Jail, with my ropes and straps under my clothes, and
that’s th’ way I’ve done many a job.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Berry never did such a thing in his life as put on women’s
clothes. He never had occasion to put them on, and
there was not the slightest shadow of foundation for
the statement. The people mentioned in the article as
having been hanged by Berry were not hanged by him
at all. This libel was printed upon November 23rd,
1889, and an action was commenced at once. The
defendants now stated in mitigation of damages that
they denied that the words bore the construction which
the plaintiff had put upon them, withdrew all imputations,
and admitted that any such were unfounded, and
apologised for the matter complained of. But the
apology and the withdrawal appeared upon the pleadings
only. From that day to this, with 158,000 of their
papers going out every week, there had net been one
single word in the paper apologising for their action.
It was open to them with a view to mitigation of damages,
to have taken this course, but they had done nothing
but put their apology upon the record, and paid into
court the majestic sum of 40s. as, in their opinion, sufficient
to atone for the wrong.</p>
<p>Mr. Berry was then put into the box and supported
Mr. Waddy’s statements.</p>
<p>Mr. Waddy then spoke upon the whole case.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>For the defendants Mr. Dodd said that the owners
of the newspaper which he represented were as anxious
as anybody could be that reasonable justice should be
done. Of course, Berry did not suggest that there was any
actual money out-of-pocket loss. Then another feature
of such a case was the question of whether the paper was
one of that class which feeds on personal attacks. He
submitted that the general character of the paper, a
point to which juries were apt to pay some attention,
was good. The articles in question were copied from
an American paper, and the proprietors of “Answers”
were in the position of having been misled, just as the
proprietors of the <i>New York Sun</i> had been misled by the
large imagination of Mr. White. Berry seemed to
be very quick in his methods, for his writ was served
within a very few days of the appearance of the article,
and without any opportunity being given to his clients to
try and make some kind of apology to suit him. His
clients had endeavoured to meet the case in a perfectly
reasonable way. They did not for a moment express
any doubt that they were dealing with an honest, a
decent, and an experienced man, they withdrew all
supposed imputations, and had had no intention of
making any; and he contended that the highest testimonial
possible was one from a person who had said
something derogatory to him. Berry had suffered no
monetary damage whatever beyond the actual costs of
the action. He suggested, therefore, that the jury
should give such a verdict as would show that the
plaintiff was quite right in bringing the matter into
court, but that they were of opinion that the defendants
had done everything that they could to mitigate the
mischief and annoyance occasioned by the publication
of the libel.</p>
<p>His Lordship then summed up, and the jury found
for the plaintiff, with £100 damages.</p>
<p class="p2 center">FINIS.</p>
<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></SPAN> This chapter is taken verbatim from Mr. Berry’s note-book. Elisions
are marked....—<span class="smcap">Ed.</span></p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></SPAN> The length of drop you, yourself, thought sufficient, as I read in the <i>Standard</i>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div class="transnote">
<p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
<p>Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
possible including some inconsistent hyphenation. Some minor
corrections of spelling and punctuation have been made.</p>
</div>
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