On this date in 1955, nightclub owner Ruth Ellis who was convicted
of murdering boyfriend David Blakely is executed. She was the last woman in
Great Britain to be put to death.
Friday, July 13, 2012
Jean Paul Marat is Murdered (1793) & Last Woman Executed in Great Britain (1955)
On this date in 1793, Jean Paul Marat, one of the most
outspoken leaders of the French Revolution, is stabbed to death in his bath by
Charlotte Corday, a Royalist sympathizer.
Originally a doctor, Marat founded the journal L'Ami
du Peuple in 1789, and its fiery criticism of those in power was a
contributing factor to the bloody turn of the Revolution in 1792. With the
arrest of the king in August of that year, Marat was elected as a deputy of
Paris to the Convention. In France's revolutionary legislature, Marat opposed
the Girondists--a faction made up of moderate republicans who advocated a
constitutional government and continental war. By 1793, Charlotte Corday, the
daughter of an impoverished aristocrat and an ally of the Girondists in Normandy,
came to regard Marat as the unholy enemy of France and plotted his
assassination. Leaving her native Caen for Paris, she had planned to kill Marat
at the Bastille Day parade on July 14 but was forced to seek him out in his
home when the festivities were canceled. On July 13, she gained an audience
with Marat by promising to betray the Caen Girondists. Marat, who had a
persistent skin disease, was working as usual in his bath when Corday pulled a
knife from her bodice and stabbed him in his chest. He died almost immediately,
and Corday waited calmly for the police to come and arrest her. She was
guillotined four days later.
Ellis was born in Rhyl, Wales, in 1926. She left school
as a young teenager, had a child and worked a variety of jobs, eventually
becoming a nightclub hostess. In 1950, she married dentist George Ellis, with
whom she had a second child. The marriage was short-lived and Ruth Ellis
returned to working in nightclubs. She then became involved in a tempestuous
relationship with David Blakely, a playboy race-car driver. Ellis became
pregnant but miscarried several days after a fight during which Blakely hit her
in the stomach. She later became obsessed with Blakely when he failed to come
see her as promised. On April 10, 1955, she shot him to death outside the
Magdala pub in Hampstead, North London. During her trial, which began in June
1955, Ellis stated “It was obvious that when I shot him I intended to kill
him.” This was a critical statement, as British law required demonstration of
clear intent in order to convict someone of murder. It reportedly took the jury
less than half an hour to find Ellis guilty and she automatically received the
death penalty. Thousands of people signed petitions protesting her punishment;
however, on July 13, 1955, the 28-year-old Ellis was hanged at Holloway Prison,
a women’s institution in Islington, London. She was the last woman executed for
murder in Great Britain. On August 13, 1964, Peter Anthony Allen and John Alan
West became the last people to be executed for murder in England. In 1965, the death
penalty for murder was banned in England, Scotland and Wales. Northern Ireland
outlawed capital punishment in 1973. However, several crimes, including
treason, remained punishable by death in Great Britain until 1998. In 1985, a
movie titled Dance With a Stranger
chronicled Ellis’ life. In December 2003, a British court dismissed an appeal
filed by Ellis’s sister asking for Ruth’s conviction to be reduced to
manslaughter on the grounds of “provocation and/or diminished responsibility.”
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