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For more than 300 years Massachusetts executed men and women convicted of murder, but with a sharp eye on “due proceeding” and against the backdrop of popular ambivalence about the death penalty's morality, cruelty, efficacy, and constitutionality. In this authoritative book, Alan Rogers offers a comprehensive account of how the efforts of reformers and abolitionists and the Supreme Judicial Court's commitment to the rule of law ultimately converged to end the death penalty in Massachusetts. In the seventeenth century, Governor John Winthrop and the Massachusetts General Court understood murder to be a sin and a threat to the colony's well-being, but the Puritans also drastically reduced the crimes for which death was the prescribed penalty and expanded a capital defendant's rights. Following the Revolution, Americans denounced the death penalty as “British and brutish” and the state's Supreme Judicial Court embraced its role as protector of the rights extended to all men by the Massachusetts Constitution. In the 1830s popular opposition nearly stopped the machinery of death and a vote in the Massachusetts House fell just short of abolishing capital punishment. A post–Civil War effort extending civil rights to all men also stimulated significant changes in criminal procedure. A “monster petition” begging the governor to spare the life of a murderer convicted on slight circumstantial evidence and the grim prospect of executing nine Chinese men found guilty of murder fueled a passionate debate about the death penalty in the decade before World War I. The trials and executions of Sacco and Vanzetti focused unwanted international and national attention on Massachusetts. This was a turning point. Sara Ehrmann took charge of the newly formed Massachusetts Council Against the Death Penalty, relentlessly lobbied the legislature, and convinced a string of governors not to sign death warrants. In the 1970s the focus shifted to the courts, and eventually, in 1980, the Supreme Judicial Court abolished the death penalty on the grounds that it violated the Massachusetts Constitution.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page
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  1. Copyright Page
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  1. Dedication
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  1. Table of Contents
  2. p. vii
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  1. Preface
  2. pp. ix-xiii
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  1. Acknowledgments
  2. pp. xv-xvi
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  1. Chapter 1 - Murder and Due Proceeding in Colonial Massachusetts
  2. pp. 1-38
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  1. Chapter 2 - “Hideous Consequences” and the Declaration of Rights
  2. pp. 39-78
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  1. Chapter 3 - “Under Sentence of Death”: The First Effort to Abolish the Death Penalty
  2. pp. 79-105
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  1. Chapter 4 - “The Monster Petition”
  2. pp. 106-136
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  1. Chapter 5 - A “Tong War” and the Second Effort to Abolish the Death Penalty
  2. pp. 137-168
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  1. Chapter 6 - Sacco and Vanzetti
  2. pp. 169-207
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  1. Chapter 7 - The Insanity Defense
  2. pp. 208-250
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  1. Chapter 8 - The Right to an Attorney and Criminal Discovery
  2. pp. 251-272
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  1. Chapter 9 - Confession: Neither Fear nor Favor
  2. pp. 273-295
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  1. Chapter 10 - The Right of the Accused to an Impartial Jury
  2. pp. 296-329
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  1. Chapter 11 - “Success—At Long Last”
  2. pp. 330-354
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  1. Chapter 12 - The Abolition of the Death Penalty
  2. pp. 355-396
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  1. Epilogue: After Abolition
  2. pp. 397-406
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 407-489
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 490-494
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  1. Back Cover
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