Nisha Rathode (Editor)

William Duell (criminal)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Criminal status
  
Transported

Convictions
  
Rape

Died
  
1740, Tyburn


Role
  
Criminal

Name
  
William Duell

Criminal penalty
  
Hanging

William Duell (criminal) 2bpblogspotcomcQdMjU0TdgUlMLGEMkrhIAAAAAAA

William Duell was a 17-year-old English boy convicted of raping Sarah Griffin in Acton, London. He was sentenced to death. On 24 November 1740, he was hanged in Tyburn, along with four others. His body hung for about 20 minutes before being cut down. It was then brought to the Surgeon's Hall to be anatomised for a medical training college, a common practice at the time.

William Duell (criminal) William Duell Executed for Murder Who Came to Life Again While

Revival

Duell was stripped and laid on the board, about to be dissected. However, one of the servants noticed that he had begun breathing slowly. Duell's breath got quicker and quicker; he was then bled, and in two hours, he was able to sit upright. That night, he was taken back to prison in Newgate. Duell, suffering from a fever and delirium during his trial and execution, had no recollection of the hanging. It was suggested that his bad state was what ultimately saved his life. By the following day, he was back to full health. Meanwhile, the public had apparently found out what happened to Duell, and there was great excitement over his case. The authorities decided to change his sentence to penal transportation. He was exiled for life.

References

William Duell (criminal) Wikipedia