John 'Babbacombe' Lee

John Henry George Lee, better known as John 'Babbacombe' Lee, (1864 - 1941?) survived three attempted judicial executions in England and is known as the man they couldn't hang. Lee was born in Abbotskerswell, Devon, served in the Royal Navy and was a known thief. In 1885 he was convicted of the brutal murder of his employer Emma Keyse at Babbacombe Bay near Torquay. He was sentenced to hang though he consistently maintained that he was innocent. However, on February 23 at Exeter prison, three attempts were made to carry out his execution, all ending in failure. As a result, Home Secretary Sir William Harcourt commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. Lee continued to petition successive Home Secretaries and was finally released from gaol in 1907. After his release he seems to have exploited his notoriety, supporting himself through lecturing on his life, even becoming the subject of a silent film. There are no reliable accounts of his whereabouts after 1916 but it is suspected that he died in the Tavistock workhouse sometime during World War II. In the 1970s, Dave Swarbrick (the fiddle-player in the English folk-rock band Fairport Convention), found a series of old newspaper aticles about Lee and composed a rock opera entitled Babbacombe Lee which was recorded and released by Fairport Convention as an LP.

External links

Lee, John 'Babbacombe' Lee, John 'Babbacombe'

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gams
okanagan lake
anaglyph
direct relationship
beta minus particle
calcaneus
krems
violawww
rafe mair
ornament
arena theater
grand theft auto: san andreas
nicholas parsons
pathfinder tendency
james ivory (mathematician)
mikhail fradkov
turbo code
curse of the ninth
reva
robert seppings
sterling lyon
wonderfalls
james rennell
alexander mcdonnell
songs in a minor
soviet submarine k 159
april 2004
pierre prvost
zooropa
md5crk
euphuism
agumon
pierre st. amant
the legend of zelda: oracle of ages
the red headed league
symphony no. 9
bernhard horwitz
sts 41 d
university of new haven
carmen covito
sts 51 a
sts 51 c
george atwood
gene ziegler