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Death Penalty


However, at the turn of the tenth century A.D, hanging became the choice of execution in Britain. Henry VIII estimated 72,000 people executed for such crimes of marrying a Jew, not confessing to a crime (even if one was not guilty) and treason. The number of capital cases increased immensely through the next few centuries. The act of killing a criminal became a common sentence for most crimes. This overuse of capital punishment dropped in the 1830's to make sure that only severe crimes, such as murder, be the only cases able to receive a death sentence. Many believed the death penalty to be too extreme for small misdemeanors. Britain's use of the death penalty had a huge impact on the American society.
             Since the settlers who came to America were predominantly from Europe, their practice of capital punishment was integrated into the new colonies" laws. The first recorded execution of the new colonies" was a gentleman named Captain George Kendall. He was executed in Jamestown, Virginia in 1608. Laws, regarding the death penalty, varied throughout the new colonies. Some were lenient, opposed to others who used it as the only form of punishment. Surprisingly, no person ever questioned this practice until a hundred years later in 1767. Cesare Beccaria was the first man to openly oppose the idea of capital punishment. Beccaria wrote an essay, which questioned the justification of being able to control the fate of a person's life. This was the turning point for many countries" views of the death penalty. Austria and Tuscany abolished their death penalty and America made its first attempt to improve this law. Thomas Jefferson helped with the reform and introduced a bill that only allowed death to be instated for crimes of murder and treason. Unfortunately, the bill was lost due to a lack of one vote.
             Once Cesare Beccaria opened the door for questioning the belief in the death penalty, others followed.


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