Aside: They were taken from public view because hanging is not an exact science. The intention in a hanging is to break the neck and spinal chord, thus causing instant death. However this process has so many dependencies - weight of body, strength of neck, swiftness of trap, length of drop, thickness of rope, etc, etc - that it was rare to get an "optimum" execution.BPSCG said:I'll take that bet. Even give you odds.
Once upon a time, hangings were a serious public event. When and why they started doing executions behind closed doors, I don't know, but when it was a public spectacle, there wasn't any outcry to put an end to it, AFAIK. okay, maybe we're more civilized now, but I'll bet if John Muhammad (the DC sniper) were to be hanged publically, he'd draw a crowd of cheering fans (there would also be no small number of people who would write very nice letters saying how very much they regretted being unable to attend).
Albert Camus wrote about the death penalty once. When he was a child, his father was all jazzed about a hanging, couldn't wait for the big day. The appointed day arrived, and daddy went to the execution, leaving mommy and Camus fils behind at home.
When Camus pere came home, he didn't say a word, but went straight to the bathroom and violently threw up.
The two major problems were that the neck was not broken, and the condemned was left alive but choked slowly to death, or the drop was so swift that the condemned was actually partially or fully decapitated by the force of the drop, an extremely messy and painful affair all round. As Camus pere would probably have testified. Eventually it was decreed that public hangings were not a decent sight after all, and that, like an abbottoir, their internal mechanisms were best left unsighted by the general public.
In the early days, it was not unusual for relatives of a choking hanged man to throw themselves on him and hasten his death (and thus relieve his suffering) by adding their bodyweight. In more recent times, various types of "death squads" deliberately scared the local populace and especially any resistants by hanging caught victims slowly (i.e. choking them) over a long period in public. Sometimes thin wire (e.g. piano wire) was used to increase the agony.
Interestingly, one of the most bizarre hangings was of an elephant(!). It had killed one of its trainers, I seem to recall, and so was condemned to hang.