People and Punishments, 1786Your task 1. For each of the following people record the following details – (a) what crime they committed and (b) what punishment you predict they will receive.
2. Now record what punishment they actually received. 3. How many did you get right? 4. On your list, make a note of all the crimes connected to property and another note of all the crimes against people. Which gets treated most seriously by the courts? 5. Why should this be the case? (Think about the law makers and law enforcers being from the well-off and business classes whilst the law breakers were often the poorest in society.) 6. Have a look at your findings. Do you think that the crime fitted the punishment give? Were people punished according to the crime they committed? 7. ‘No Bill’ prisoners were those for whom not enough evidence could be found to put them on trial. There was no organised police force at this time. What might this suggest about law and order in 1786? 8. For what crime was capital punishment (death) given? How many were imprisoned as a punishment? What other punishments were given out by the court? 9. A lot of these punishments were carried out in public? Why? 10. Now that you have looked in detail at this source, what do you think the purpose of punishment was at this time? Finished? Then take a look at a similar Calendar from 1836 to see how the nature of punishment changed over time.
|