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From lethal injection to hangings— haunting photos show how the death penalty has evolved in America

Point of the Mountain, Utah: Photo of a group of newsmen looking at, and taking photos of the chair in which Gary Gilmore sat when facing the firing squad here 1/17. Draped over that back of the chair is the corduroy material hood which Gilmore wore during the execution. Upper right on the chair back are the bullet holes. The chair is surrounded with sandbags
A group of newsmen looking at the chair in which Gary Gilmore sat when facing the firing squad on January 17, 1977, in Point of the Mountain, Utah.Bettmann / Getty
  • The use of the death penalty in the US dates back to colonial times.

  • Various methods of execution have been used over the years, including lethal gas and firing squad.

  • The United States executed 18 people in 2022, according to Newsweek.

Public executions were permitted until the 1930s.

Rainey Bethea walks up the stairs with guards for his public execution, in this Aug. 14, 1936 photo in Owensboro, KY.
Rainey Bethea walks up the stairs with guards for his public execution, in this Aug. 14, 1936 photo in Owensboro, KY.AP Photo

Capital punishment in the United States dates back to colonial times with some 16,047 people being executed between 1608 and 2022, according to the non-profit Death Penalty Information Center.

While executions were once public to send a message to other citizens, they became private affairs nationwide after a public hanging in Kentucky in 1936 went awry, per The New York Times.

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Kentucky was the last state still conducting public executions at the time, according to the Times. The execution of Rainey Bethea for rape became a media spectacle drawing 20,000 observers from across the nation to the city of Owensboro. Less than two years later, the Times reported that Kentucky outlawed public executions, becoming the last state to ban the practice.

In 1890, New York saw the first execution by electrocution.

Artist's impression of execution by electric chair, 1890. After experiments on animals to ensure the practicability of electrocution as method of execution, the first execution was carried out at Auburn Prison, New York, 6 August 1890 using a Westinghouse AC system. The man executed was William Kemmler, convicted of murdering his common-law wife.

The first execution by electrocution was revolting to onlookers. In August 1890, William Kemmler was executed at Auburn State Prison for the murder of his wife, according to Syracuse.com.

Officials in New York used the electric chair for the first time, thinking it a quicker and more humane approach than hanging. In reality, news headlines of the day called it "Scientific Butchery," saying the "Death Chamber Reeks with the Smell of Burning Flesh," per Syracuse.com.

The first shock sent 1,700 volts of electricity through Kemmler's body for 17 seconds, but after a few moments of stillness, Kemmler gasped, prompting the doctors to quickly throw the switch again. They shocked him for nearly four more minutes, during which time several observers fainted or collapsed.

Despite the initial failure, the chair's popularity later surged, becoming the preferred method of execution for 26 states by 1949, per the outlet.

By the 1920s, executioners were using cyanide gas.

Jack Sullivan who murdered John Bradbury, a railroad officer, during a gun fight, is seen smoking a cigar a few moments before he took his last breath in the lethal gas execution chamber at the state prison on May 17, 1936 in Florence, Arizona.
Jack Sullivan, who murdered railroad officer John Bradbury during a gunfight, is seen smoking a cigar a few moments before he took his last breath in the lethal gas execution chamber at the state prison on May 17,1936, in Florence, Arizona.AFP via Getty Images

In 1924, some executioners were using hydrogen cyanide gas, per The Death Penalty Information Center,  a DC-based non-profit. It was the same gas that would be used by the German Nazis in the genocide of thousands of Jewish people in World War II, according to The Associated Press.

In one Arizona execution, the Madera Tribune described how 23-year-old Jack Sullivan smiled at photographers as he was strapped into a chair in a gas chamber. Once the chamber was sealed, a warden "pulled a string leading to a receptacle under the execution chair" causing cyanide pellets to drop into a receptacle of sulfuric acid. Moments later, Sullivan's "grin had disappeared and his head slumped forward," per the Tribune.

By 1999, much of the US had turned away from lethal gas as experts found it to be a slow death wherein prisoners thrashed around and gasped for breath, per the AP.

One execution was by firing squad.

Point of the Mountain, Utah: Photo of a group of newsmen looking at, and taking photos of the chair in which Gary Gilmore sat when facing the firing squad here 1/17. Draped over that back of the chair is the corduroy material hood which Gilmore wore during the execution. Upper right on the chair back are the bullet holes. The chair is surrounded with sandbags
A group of newsmen looking at the chair in which Gary Gilmore sat when facing the firing squad on January 17, 1977, in Point of the Mountain, Utah.Bettmann / Getty

The execution of 36-year-old Gary Gilmore in 1977 was the first time the death penalty was used in the US since the Supreme Court had struck down capital punishment in 1972, according to ABC4 Utah.

Gilmore, convicted of two murders, was put to death by a firing squad at Utah State Prison, according to the outlet. The method of execution was his own request in lieu of hanging, per ABC4.

In the execution, Gilmore was strapped to a chair with a hood covering his head and a target on his heart. Five rifles poked through slits on the wall opposite Gilmore, whose final words were "Let's do it," according to The Guardian.

The first execution by lethal injection took place in 1982.

Charlie Brooks at a funeral home. Brooks was the first person to be executed by lethal injection.
Charlie Brooks at a funeral home. Brooks was the first person to be executed by lethal injection.David Woo/Corbis via Getty Images

Lethal injection was first used as capital punishment in the 1980s. Convicted murderer Charles Brooks Jr., 40, was put to death in Huntsville, Texas on December 7, 1982, with drugs and sedatives, according to The New York Times.

At the time, lethal injection was hotly debated in the medical community as a more humane version of the death penalty that was complicated in a field wherein physicians vowed to do no harm, per the Times.

During the execution, witnesses said Brooks began rasping and wheezing, and his fingers trembled, according to the Texas Monthly. After a moment, he stilled and was declared dead.

Lethal injection would later become the most popular method of execution in the US, according to The Death Penalty Information Center.

The abolitionist movement began in the 1700s and remains today.

Protesters against the death penalty gather in Terre Haute, Ind., Monday, July 13, 2020, where Daniel Lewis Lee, a convicted killer, was scheduled to be executed Monday at the federal prison in Terre Haute.

Almost as long as the death penalty has been recorded in the United States, it has been protested by abolitionists, according to the DPIC.

While the abolitionist movement began in the late 18th century, it remains a divisive topic today. Some 23 states in the US do not use the death penalty, while 24 do and three other states have moratoriums on the punishment, according to DPIC data.

Various executions have drawn national attention and pleas to governors to grant stays of execution, including from victims' families.

In the 2020 execution of 47-year-old Daniel Lewis Lee, family members of Lee's victims (as well as the prosecutor and trial judge) asked that his sentence be commuted to life in prison without parole, per The New York Times. Regardless, Lee was executed on July 14, 2020.

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