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Frederick Seddon was born in Liverpool to William Seddon and Mary Ann (née Kennen) on 21 January 1872. He married Margaret Ann (née Jones) (1878–1946) on 31 December 1893, and had five children with her: William James Seddon (b. 1894); Margaret Seddon (b. 1896); Frederick Henry Seddon Jr (b. 1897); Ada Seddon (b. 1905), and Lilian Louisa Agnes Emma Seddon (b. 1911). [2]
Frederick Seddon (1870–1912), British murderer; Gareth Seddon (born 1980), English footballer; George Seddon (academic) (1927–2007), Australian academic; George Seddon (cabinetmaker) (1727–1801), English cabinetmaker; Sir Herbert Seddon (1903–1977), British orthopaedic surgeon and nerve researcher; James Seddon (1815–1880), American ...
Mr Justice Bucknill as caricatured by 'Spy' in 1900 Mr Justice Bucknill sentencing Frederick Seddon to death in 1912. This is the only known photograph of the death sentence being pronounced in England.
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Frederick Seddon; Siege of Sidney Street; Suffragette bombing and arson campaign This page was last edited on 17 June 2022, at 11:34 (UTC). Text is available ...
Among those he executed was the poisoner Frederick Seddon in 1912 and double murderer Dr Buck Ruxton in 1936. [8] During World War II he was appointed as executioner by the US Military and was responsible for 13 out of 16 hangings of US soldiers at the Shepton Mallet military prison in Somerset. He executed George Johnson Armstrong on July 9 ...
Orwell excluded Jack the Ripper's murder spree as being "in a class by itself" and considered the cases of Dr. Palmer of Rugeley, Neill Cream, Mrs. Maybrick, Dr. Crippen, Frederick Seddon, Joseph Smith, Armstrong, Bywaters and Thompson, and an unnamed case from 1919, wherein the accused was acquitted. [a]
Passing the sentence on Frederick Seddon: Mr Justice Bucknill, wearing a black cap, passes a sentence of death on a convicted murderer (1912). The black cap is a plain black fabric square formerly worn as symbolic headgear by English, Welsh, Irish and Northern Irish judges in criminal cases when passing a sentence of death.