How Czolgosz Will Meet His Death
T electrocution
of Czolgosz for the murder of the late President William McKinley
is arranged to take place in Auburn Prison, New York State, one
day during the week commencing Monday, October 28th. This uncertainty
as to the exact date and hour is intentional on the part of the
authorities, for the electrocution law of New York State provides
that in sentencing a murderer to death the Court shall merely name
the week during which the execution shall take place. The idea of
this is that it is quite unnecessary cruelty to set the exact moment
for the execution, to the approach of which the wretched criminal
must look forward with momentarily increasing horror and dread,
thus making his last days of life a perfect torture to him.
From the moment sentence of death
by electrocution is pronounced the criminal is never left alone
for a single moment. He is taken at once from the court to the prison
in which the electrocution is to take place, and there lodged in
one of the condemned cells, of which there are six in both Sing
Sing and Auburn. The cells allotted to persons under sentence of
death are totally different from any to be found in English prisons.
They are located in a separate building quite apart from the rest
of the prison, and immediately adjacent to the execution chamber.
They are built in a row and are entirely open in front except for
strong steel bars, which take the place of doors; the sides and
backs are, however, constructed in the ordinary way. A few feet
from the front of the cells is another range of steel bars which
runs the whole length of the cells, thus forming a kind of corridor
in which two warders are constantly on duty both day and night.
Thus condemned prisoners are never for a moment free from observation,
and any attempt at suicide—and there were several when electrocution
was first adopted—can be instantly frustrated. Each cell is fitted
with a roll-up iron front like a shop shutter, which can readily
be lowered when it is desired to screen a prisoner from view, and
this is always done when any prisoner is removed from his cell for
exercise or execution, in order to prevent the occupants of the
other cells from seeing him.
The execution chamber is situated
only a few steps from the cells, and is a lofty apartment measuring
some thirty feet long by about twenty feet broad. It has rather
a bare appearance, the only objects in it being a small, square
kind of cupboard which projects some five or six feet from the wall
at one end of the room, and in which the person who switches on
the death-dealing current is concealed. It is entirely closed in
and roofed, and has no entrance from the execution room, and thus
the executioner is never seen either by the criminal or those witnessing
the execution. There are a few plain deal chairs for the officials
and reporters scattered about, and the death-chair itself; that
is all. At the back of the wall against which the executioner’s
box is built is the room in which the post-mortem examination is
held, and from this room a door by which the executioner enters
and leaves the building opens into the prison square.
The interior of the executioner’s
box is quite bare and unfurnished, and there is nothing to be seen
in it except the wires conveying the current, and a large brass
switch with an insulated handle, such as may be seen in any electric
light station in the kingdom, by which the fatal shock is given.
A small electric bell placed just above the switch, connecting with
a push in the execution chamber, is used to convey the signal to
apply the current. At one time this signal was given in the following
manner:—The executioner used to hold with one finger a small curtain
ring connected with a wire which ran through a hole in the wall,
and at the other end of which was another ring held by one of the
prison officials in the execution chamber, and a pull on this used
to give the signal. This method was, however, changed after one
of the warders had been nearly electrocuted whilst adjusting the
straps on the prisoner by a premature movement on the part of the
electrician.
The death-chair itself is a plain
oak chair built exceptionally heavy, and fitted with strong insulated
straps to secure the prisoner, whilst its legs are firmly bolted
to the floor. The wires conveying the current are in no way a part
of it, but are led from the front of the executioner’s box up to
the roof, from which they hang looking merely like ordinary electric
light pendants without the globes. In the small brass fittings at
the ends of them are sponges moistened with salt water. One of these
electrodes—to give them their proper name—is attached to the cap
or headpiece which the prisoner wears, and the other to the band
which is fastened to his leg a few inches above the ankle. The electric
current thus enters the body at the head and passes out at the leg.
I should say that a small place is shaved at the side of the prisoner’s
head where the sponge in the cap touches, for it is essential that
there should be no obstacles whatever between the electrodes and
the flesh. [138][139]
Just before the prisoner is brought
in the current is carefully tested by the electrician to make sure
that there is a sufficient voltage. The current, by the way, is
obtained from the dynamos used for supplying the prison with electric
light.
The warders, five in number, take
up their positions by the side of the chair ready to adjust the
straps and electrodes. Each one has his own particular strap to
buckle, and it is almost incredible how rapidly they do it and how
short a time passes between the time the prisoner enters the room
and everything is ready. There is no delay, no waiting; everything
is done so quickly and quietly that it seems almost instantaneous.
The warder of the prison heads the
procession from the condemned cell, and takes up his position to
the left of the chair next to the electrician and doctor, the former
ready to press the signalling bell-push in the wall, the latter
with his stop-watch in his hand to count the duration of the current.
The prisoner is brought in by two
or three warders and the chaplain and is placed in the chair. The
straps are secured and the electrodes fixed in a few seconds; the
cap is drawn over his face; the warders slip back to their places;
the chaplain murmurs a last word of comfort to the doomed man; the
warder gives one hasty glance round to see that everything is correct,
then raises the handkerchief in his hand; the electrician touches
the bell-push in the wall behind him; the sound of it ringing and
the great switch in the executioner’s box being forced into place
can be faintly heard; the figure in the chair gives a convulsive
shiver as the muscles expand and contract, and it strains against
the confining straps. Nothing more; he is dead and the murder of
M’Kinley is avenged.
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