Transcription
EXECUTION OF MRS. M'KINNON, Who was Executed at Edinburgh on Wednesday morning the 16th April, 1823, in the presence of' 30,000 spectators, for the Murder of Mr. Wm. Howat, and her body given for dissec- tion; with an account of her Dress, Behaviour, and Dying Declaration on the scaffold. Edinburgh, April 6 ?.This day Mrs. M'KINNON was Executed here pursuant to her sentence. for the Murder of Mr Wm Howat, a writer's clerk by stabbing him with a knife. It appeared that Mrs. M'Kinnon kept an infamous house on the South Bridge, and that Howat, along with some companions on the evening of the 18th of February last went to her house intoxicated and after drinking some time a squabble took place betwixt them and some of the girls who lodged in her house. Mrs. M'Kinnon was absent at the commencement of the affray, but she soon arrived, and flying into a passion, said " Give me a knife and I will soon settle the b------," she then deliberately went to a knife-case, and snized a knife, with which she gave Howat a mortal wound in the breast, of which he died several days after in the In- firmary. Her trial lasted 18 hours, and excited the greatest interest, and till near the end, she had great hopes that it would prove favourable to her, but when she heard the verdict, she exclaimed, " Lord have mercy on me," and immediately fainted. Mrs. M'Kinnon has conducted herself since her trial with the greatest propriety, At first, her mental agony was so excessive, that she refused sustenance of every kind, until the evening of the following Sunday; but since then she acquired more fortitude and on being informed that her petition for mercy could not be complied with, she heard final doom with the greatest composure. Early on Monday morning She was removed from the Calton hill Jail to the Lock-up-house; she appeared very dejected, and was supported on the arm of an old woman. About half-past eight o'clock she left the Lock-up-House, attended by the Ma- gistrates, officers, and the Rev. Mr. Porteous, the chaplain of the prison and seve- ral other pions Gentlemen, and proceeded with a slow and feeble step to the head of Libberton's W ynd, where the scaffold was erected On her arrival at the fatal spot she appeared greatly agitated, and a general sigh of sorrow pervaded the immense multitude who had assembled to witness her melancholy end During the time that the awful preparations were going on, she was supported by two of the attendants; she denied to the last as having committed the murder and hinted that first a woman of the name of M'Donald was the perpatratior; but she died in peace with all men; she trusted in Him who hath said, "He that sincerely repent- eth shall be freely forgiven." The fatal cord being adjusted, a short but impressive prayer was pronounced in which she seemed fervently to join; about five minutes before nine o'clock this unhappy victim of passion expiated with her life, the outrage which she had committed on the laws of God, and of her country ?an awful warning to the dissipated of the one sex, and the vicious of the other After she had hung the usual time , her body was taken down and conveyed to the College for dossection. Mrs, M'Kinnon was elegantly dressed in a black silk gown, trummed with white lace at the bottom. silk stockings, and white slippers she was betwixt 35 and 40 years of age, good looking and rather corpulent. Her father at one time was quar- ter master of the 79th regiment of foot At a very carly age she was debauched by an officer in the army, under very atrocious circumstances; and after that event her family thrust her from under their roof, and totally abandoned her, to which cir- cumstance may be attributed her after course of prefligate life The crowd assembled on this lamentable occasion, wss unusually great at an ear- ly hour the High Street was crowded, and all the windows tops of houses, and every elevated place within view of the fatal spot filled with spectators, so that it is calculated that not less than 30,000 people were present. John Muir Printer, Glasgow.
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Date of publication:
1823 shelfmark: L.C.Fol.73(048)
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