In the late eighteenth century, as the wealth of the Georgian Dublin increased, so too did burglary and violent crime. The Hibernian Journal reported in 1780 that 'murder in this city has become so common, that it has lost all its horrors; every day teems with new instances of the most horrid barbarity.' The city was faced with a stark choice: either eliminate the armed footpads and highway robbers or be crushed by them. The authorities embarked on a crusade to sentence hundreds of convicted felons to death. Hundreds more ...
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In the late eighteenth century, as the wealth of the Georgian Dublin increased, so too did burglary and violent crime. The Hibernian Journal reported in 1780 that 'murder in this city has become so common, that it has lost all its horrors; every day teems with new instances of the most horrid barbarity.' The city was faced with a stark choice: either eliminate the armed footpads and highway robbers or be crushed by them. The authorities embarked on a crusade to sentence hundreds of convicted felons to death. Hundreds more were transported abroad. Dublin Hanged traces the source of the problem to the first wave of hangings. The author examines the horrific and violent industrial conflicts as well as the catastrophic policy of sending convicts to the Americas long after England had stopped this practice.
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Add this copy of Dublin Hanged: Crime, Law Enforcement and Punishment in to cart. $28.72, good condition, Sold by ThriftBooks-Baltimore rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Halethorpe, MD, UNITED STATES, published 1994 by Irish Academic Press.