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A gibbet is any instrument of public execution (including guillotine, executioner's block, impalement stake, hanging gallows, or related scaffold), but gibbeting refers to the use of a gallows-type structure from which the dead or dying bodies of criminals were hung on public display to deter other existing or potential criminals. Occasionally the gibbet was also used as a method of execution, with the criminal being left to die of exposure, thirst and/or starvation. The term gibbet may also be used to refer to the practice of placing a criminal on display within a gibbet. This practice is also called "hanging in chains"
 
A short story- Margaret Croke

Margaret Croke in 1809 became a pirate not on purpose. She was on a ship with her three young daughters. And her husband thought that the family was going to be sent to a debtors' prison. So he killed two crewmen and threw the Captain overboard, then commandeering the vessel. The Captain survived and was able to testify that Margaret hit him when her husband was fighting the Captain. Another crew member testified that Margaret was actually afraid of her husband and attempted to escape. But unfortunately both were accused of piracy. Margaret shouted desperately to the judge, “The lord have mercy on me! What will my poor children do!?”
5c3fbd92-15b4-4d72-a7bb-e03f702c95c3.jpeg
 
The authority subjected her to the worst possible punishment for an unrepentant murderess. Margaret was sent to the gallows on a beach near Freshwater Bridge on November 23rd 1809. Nearly paralyzed with fear, she squatted herself down in front of a massive crowd, waiting for her final fate. The crowd shouted, she felt humiliated as they insulted her.

ecf8e42f-483a-4599-b940-66303a0250e1.jpeg
 
According to the Murder Act 1751, which stipulated that "in no case whatsoever shall the body of any murderer be suffered to be buried"; the cadaver was either to be publicly dissected or left "hanging in chains". After a slow and painful hanging, the convict’s body was then hung in an iron cage on Halifax provincial prison at Point Pleasant for nearly three decades.

a425ef21-37bf-4bae-99fe-1c123ee137cf.jpeg
 
When the carrion finally deteriorated, what was left of the body was never taken down. None of her daughters were willing to collect her remains. They were sent to workhouse after her execution. The public display of Margaret's corpse subjected her daughters to public ridicule. The girls spent their difficult childhood in shame and abomination of their unfit mother. People seldom heard the three daughters mention Margaret under anything other than "our bitch mom“.

d770127b-b342-4e56-a6f6-2cfea3457bf7.jpeg

P-041.jpg
 
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Finally, in a storm her skeleton blew to pieces and washed into the sea. Many years later, her skull was picked up at the tide line and preserved in the Halifax museum 1844. Today the gruesome artifact still draws visitors who morbidly want to see the skull of the first female criminal convicted of privacy in Canada. 25 years after Margaret's execution, the use of gibbeting it was formally repealed by statute in 1834. Because no other woman had been sentenced to piracy since her case. She is also notoriously remembered as the only convicted female pirate in Canadian history, although she never intended to be one.
 
According to the Murder Act 1751, which stipulated that "in no case whatsoever shall the body of any murderer be suffered to be buried"; the cadaver was either to be publicly dissected or left "hanging in chains". After a slow and painful hanging, the convict’s body was then hung in an iron cage on Halifax provincial prison at Point Pleasant for nearly three decades.

a425ef21-37bf-4bae-99fe-1c123ee137cf.jpeg
1809*
 
A short story- Margaret Croke

Margaret Croke in 1809 became a pirate not on purpose. She was on a ship with her three young daughters. And her husband thought that the family was going to be sent to a debtors' prison. So he killed two crewmen and threw the Captain overboard, then commandeering the vessel. The Captain survived and was able to testify that Margaret hit him when her husband was fighting the Captain. Another crew member testified that Margaret was actually afraid of her husband and attempted to escape. But unfortunately both were accused of piracy. Margaret shouted desperately to the judge, “The lord have mercy on me! What will my poor children do!?”

318fe7e4a3583eeb627063374165cbc5.jpg5c3fbd92-15b4-4d72-a7bb-e03f702c95c3.jpeg
 
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The authority subjected her to the worst possible punishment for an unrepentant murderess. Margaret was sent to the gallows on a beach near Freshwater Bridge on November 23rd 1809. Nearly paralyzed with fear, she squatted herself down in front of a massive crowd, waiting for her final fate. The crowd shouted, she felt humiliated as they insulted her.

ecf8e42f-483a-4599-b940-66303a0250e1.jpeg
 
According to the Murder Act 1751, which stipulated that "in no case whatsoever shall the body of any murderer be suffered to be buried"; the cadaver was either to be publicly dissected or left "hanging in chains". After a slow and painful hanging, the convict’s body was then hung in an iron cage on Halifax provincial prison at Point Pleasant for nearly three decades.

F55DC63A-97F4-4F7F-B869-A4011B185F40.jpeg
 
When the carrion finally deteriorated, what was left of the body was never taken down. None of her daughters were willing to collect her remains. They were sent to workhouse after her execution. The public display of Margaret's corpse subjected her daughters to public ridicule. The girls spent their difficult childhood in shame and abomination of their unfit mother. People seldom heard the three daughters mention Margaret under anything other than “our bitch mom”.

d770127b-b342-4e56-a6f6-2cfea3457bf7.jpegP-041.jpgtibs002.jpg
 
Finally, in a storm her skeleton blew to pieces and washed into the sea. Many years later, her skull was picked up at the tide line and preserved in the Halifax museum 1844. Today the gruesome artifact still draws visitors who morbidly want to see the skull of the first female criminal convicted of privacy in Canada. 25 years after Margaret's execution, the use of gibbeting was formally repealed by statute in 1834. Because no other woman had been charged with piracy since her case. She is also notoriously remembered as the only convicted female pirate in the history of Canada, although she never intended to be one.

fd387728-133a-4c86-871a-baa4e2926df1.jpeg
 
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