Saturday, November 30, 2019
Punishments In History Essays - Torture, Physical Punishments
  Punishments In History  The common practice of early Americans that seems most alien to me is that of  human punishment. During the seventeen and eighteen hundreds, the way people  were punished was savage and crucial. Those who punished others for a crime,  seemed to take matters in there own hands and give punishments that were truly  too harsh compared to the crime committed. One of the areas in which such  punishment was greatly visible was in the slave institutes. Masters would treat  their slaves as if they were ?animals'. It was crucial to see that the only  thing that differed Southern and Northern stores was that those in the south  stocked "negro-whips" and "mantraps" in their shelves. Whipping was the  popular way of punishing slaves at the time, therefore stores made sure they had  that six to seven foot long peace of cowhide, to sale to masters who wished to  beat there slaves. This type of whip was not enough, for they began making whips  that had a platted wire on the end so that it would hurt more and create more  damage to the skin. I was shocked to read that a slave would get brutal whips  just for simply taking a drink of water when it was not break time yet. If  looked at carefully the slave had committed no crime yet was still whipped by  his master. This is no way in which a human should treat another human, since we  are suppose to be the intelligent, moralistic species of the world. Whipping is  still nice, compared to other ways in which many criminals were punished. At  times of great crimes, delinquents were faced with the mutilating punishments of  the old penal laws, which included branding, ear cropping, hanging and even  occasionally castration and burning alive. Thinking of such punishment is harsh,  for I thought that the only things that got castrated were the animals in my  grandpas' farm. That is not all, since I can not imaging a live human being  burned to death. Making such scenes even more disturbing was that they were held  in public areas where many people could gather and watch. In New Haven,    Connecticut, around 1810, Charles Fowler, a local historian, recalled seeing the"admiring students a [Yale] college" gathered around to watch petty  criminals receive "five or ten lashes...with a rawhide whip." On a day of a  hanging near Mount Holly, New Jersey, in the 1820's, the scene was that of a  holiday: " around the place in every direction were the assembled multitudes  ? some in tents, and by-wagons. This is obscene, for humans got a kick out of  seeing other humans get killed. Where has the idea of morality and self-respect  gone for these people? Right now you probably just imaging men getting such  punishments but that was not the case, for women were often treated in the same  type of manor. In a country tavern in Georgia, Margaret Hall summoned the slave  chambermaid, but she could not come because the mistress had been whipping her  and she was not fit to be seen. The next morning she made her appearance with  her face marked in several places by the cuts of the cowskin and her neck  handkerchief covered with spots of blood. In my point of view, a woman is not to  be treated in such manor, for they are to be respected more than men. It is not  that I don't believe that people should be punished for doing things they  shouldn't do, but it should be reasonable. I believe in the idea of "Eye for  an Eye", for if a person murders another, his/her punishment should be death.    But for a person, who simply got into a fight with someone else, death doesn't  seem to be a reasonable way of punishing him. Instead he should be given a  beaten himself so that he can see what it feels like. People in the past seemed  to take things to far and not think about the situation carefully. Thanks to    God, the old ways, so startling unfamiliar to the modern reader, gradually fell  away. Americans changed their assumptions about what was proper, decent, and  normal in everyday life and began to look at life in a different view. Who  knows, perhaps our morals, to some future observer, will seem as idiosyncratic  and astonishing, as I believe this type of behavior is.    
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