- Laurence Shirley, 4th Earl Ferrers
Laurence Shirley, 4th Earl Ferrers (
August 18 ,1720 –May 5 ,1760 ) was the last member of theHouse of Lords hanged inEngland .The 4th Earl Ferrers, descendant of an ancient and noble family, was the eldest son of Hon. Laurence Ferrers, himself a younger son of the 1st Earl Ferrers—a descendant of
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex . At the age of twenty, he quit his estates and Oxford education, and during the time he spent inParis he plunged into every kind of excess. Ferrers inherited his title from his insane uncle in 1745 and with it estates inLeicestershire ,Derbyshire andNorthamptonshire . He resided, however, atStaunton Harold Hall in northwest Leicestershire. In 1752, he married the youngest daughter of Sir William Meredith. Ferrers was also a cousin toSelina, Countess of Huntingdon , the prominentMethodist lady and supporter ofGeorge Whitefield , though he was not involved in the Methodist revival.It was said that there was
insanity in his family, and from an early age his behaviour seems to have been eccentric, and his temper violent, though he was quite capable of managing hisbusiness affairs. Significantly, in 1758, his wife obtained a separation from him forcruelty , which would have been extremely rare for the time. She was said to be extremely pretty and clearly did not appreciate her husband's drinking, womanising and the fact that he had a mistress and children. The old family steward (see after) was murdered, it would seem, because he may have given evidence on Mary's behalf and was afterwards taxed with collecting rents due to her. She married again in 1769 toLord Frederick Campbell , but was burned to death at her country seat, Coomb Bank,Kent , on25 July 1807 .The Ferrers' estates were then vested in
trustee s; Ferrers secured the appointment of an old family steward named Johnson, as receiver of rents. This man faithfully performed his duty as a servant to the trustees, and did not prove amenable to Ferrers' personal wishes. On18 January 1760 , Johnson called at the earl'smansion atStaunton Harold ,Leicestershire , by appointment, and was directed to his lordship's study. Here, after some business conversation, Lord Ferrers shot and killed him. In the following April Ferrers was tried formurder by his peers inWestminster Hall . His defence, which he conducted in person with great ability, was a plea of insanity, and it was supported by considerable evidence, but he was found guilty. According toHorace Walpole , "Lord Ferrers was not mad enough to be struck with Lady Huntingdon's sermons. The Methodists have nothing to brag of his conversion, though Whitefield prayed for him." Ferrers subsequently said that he had only pleaded insanity to oblige his family, and that he had himself always been ashamed of such a defence.On
5 May 1760 , dressed in a light coloured suit embroidered with silver (the outfit he had worn at his wedding), he was taken in his owncarriage from theTower of London to Tyburn and there hanged. There are several illustrations of the hanging. It has been said that as a concession to his order therope used was ofsilk . The Execution was widley publicised in popular culture as evidence of equality of the law and the story of a wicked nobleman who was executed "like a common criminal" was told well into the 1800s.External links
* [http://www.exclassics.com/newgate/ng284.htm The Newgate Calendar: LAURENCE, EARL FERRERS]
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