Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 - Source Vintage
Source Vintage

Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868

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A Rare Antique Victorian William Worsley Hanging Souvenir Folk Art Bobbin 1868 With Original Coloured Glass Attachments. The bobbin reads” William Worsley Hung 1868”. These bobbins have been described by Bonhams Auctioneers as “the holy grail of bobbins”.

William Worsley Was The Last Person To Be Publicly Hanged In Bedfordshire And Subsequently, The Penultimate Public Hanging In The Whole Of The UK, With The Last Taking place In London Just 2 Weeks later.

Public hangings were a community event, people coming from far and wide to witness the spectacle. Hawkers and travelling pedlars would attend and use the gathering to ply their wares and selling “hanging souvenirs”, like this bobbin, on the day to spectators.

There are a rare few which commemorate a public hanging, and this particular example is one of those rare bobbins which are now highly collectible.

Condition is good, commensurate with age. No issues.

Measures: 9.6cm x 0.6cm

Weighs 8.57 grams


MORE ABOUT WILLIAM WORSLEY:-

William Worsley was born in Luton in 1826 and after an Apprenticeship, became a ‘Hat Blocker’ (a person skilled in making the wooden moulds on which hats were constructed).

Life was tough for William and things came to a head in 1867 after William and two friends, Levi Welch (pictured above) and James Day (pictured above), had been drinking in a pub called the Royal Oak in Luton. Short of money, but full of drink, William, Levi and Day, saw a man called William Bradbury who had been drinking in two public houses, The Bell and The English Gentleman, finally leaving for home at midnight.

Bradbury was accosted and robbed by Worsley, Welch and Day, and was struck and killed with an iron bar. The Police were called and the iron bar was quickly found, hidden in a hedge nearby.

Soon afterwards, Worsley, Welch and Day were arrested and charged with murder. Welch quickly turned Kings evidence, blaming the whole episode on Worsley. He was jailed for six years for robbery. Day claimed he had only been at the scene because he was looking for a sixpence he had lost, and was subsequently acquitted. However, Worsley was found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging. William Worsley was held at Bedford Prison and became the last person to be publicly hanged in Bedfordshire in 1868.

Worsley dictated a statement to the Governor in which he confessed his guilt. Between twelve and one o’clock he dictated a letter to his friends which was taken down in writing by the Governor, and he expressed a wish that the same should be made known to the public at large. It read as follows:

“Dear Brothers and Sisters, - I have made a true statement to the Chaplain and Governor, who has taken it down in writing, - how this sad affair has happened, and what made me to do it, and it is my wish that what I have said may be made known to you, in the hope that it may be satisfactory to you. I never meant to leave this world before I made it known as soon as I found there were no hopes left for me. I hope you will forgive me for what I have done. I am quite satisfied with the judge who tried me - also with my counsellor, as far as he had information given to him. I have only now to thank you all sincerely and he public at large for what you and they have done for me, and hope that the Lord will reward you and them for it”.

“I must now bid you all farewell, and pray that this may be a warning to all of you. Give my kind love to my wife, and I hope she will make herself as comfortable as she can about me, and hope she will pray earnestly to the Almighty for guidance and strength during the remainder of her days. I pray now day and night for the merciful God to forgive me, and I hope that I shall make my peace with Him”.

“No more from your unfortunate brother”

“WILLIAM WORSLEY”.

 

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