Albert Pierrepoint
Albert Pierrepoint (30 March 1905 – 10 July 1992) was an English hangman from a family tradition of executioners, who served as the United Kingdom's chief executioner and performed an estimated 435 to 600 hangings between 1931 and 1956.[1][2] Born in Clayton, Yorkshire, to Henry Pierrepoint, a former executioner, Pierrepoint assisted his father and uncle Thomas before taking up the role independently, executing criminals convicted of murder, treason, and other capital offenses across British prisons and territories.[3] His career peaked during and after World War II, when he hanged numerous Nazi war criminals, including camp commandant Josef Kramer and guards from Bergen-Belsen, as well as British traitors like William Joyce and John Amery, applying the "long drop" method designed for swift cervical fracture to minimize suffering.[3] Pierrepoint's efficiency and precision earned him a reputation as Britain's most prolific executioner, with records showing 433 men and 17 women among his executions, including the last woman hanged in the UK, Ruth Ellis.[3] In his 1974 autobiography Executioner: Pierrepoint, he reflected on the role's psychological toll, ultimately concluding that capital punishment failed as a deterrent and advocating its abolition, a shift that marked a notable controversy in his legacy.[4]