Online Encyclopedia

DUCKING

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 631 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DUCKING  and CUCKING STOOLS, chairs used for the

punishment of scolds, witches and prostitutes in bygone days . The two have been generally confused, but are quite distinct . The earlier, the Cucking-stool2 or
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Stool of Repentance, is of very ancient date, and was used by the
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Saxons, who called it the Scealding or Scolding Stool . It is mentioned in Domesday
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Book as in use at Chester, being called cathedra stercoris, a name which seems to confirm the first of the derivations suggested in the
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foot-note below . Seated on this stool the woman, her head and feet
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bare, was publicly exposed- at her door or paraded through the streets amidst the jeers of the crowd . The Cucking-stool was used for both sexes, and was specially the punishment for dishonest brewers and bakers . Its use in the case of scolding
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women declined on the introduction in the
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middle of the 16th century of the
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Scold's Bridle (see BRANKS), and it disappears on the introduction a little later of the Ducking-stool . The earliest record of the use of this latter is towards the beginning of the 17th century . It was a-strongly made wooden armchair (the surviving specimens are of oak) in which the
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culprit was seated, an iron
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band being placed around her so that she should not fall out during her immersion . Usually the chair was fastened to a long wooden beam fixed as a seesaw on the edge of a pond or
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river . Sometimes, however, the Ducking-stool wasnot a fixture but was mounted on a pair of wooden wheels so that it could be wheeled through the streets, and at the river-edge was hung by a chain from the end of a beam . In sentencing a woman the magistrates ordered the number of duckings she should have .

Yet another type of Ducking-stool was called a tumbrel . It was a chair on two wheels with two long shafts fixed to the axles . This was pushed into the pond and then the shafts released, thus tipping the chair up backwards . Sometimes the punishment proved fatal, the unfortunate woman dying of

shock . Ducking-stools were used in England as
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late as the beginning of the 19th century . The last recorded cases are those of a Mrs Ganble at Plymouth (1808); of Jenny Pipes, " a notorious scold " (1809), and Sarah Leeke (1817), both of
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Leominster . In the last case the
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water in the pond was so low that the victim was merely wheeled round the
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town in the chair . See W . Andrews, Old Time Punishments (Hull, 1890) ; A . M . Earle, Curious Punishments of Bygone Days (Chicago, 1896) ; W . C .

Hazlitt, Faiths and
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Folklore (
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London, 1905) ; Llewellynn Jewitt in The Reliquary, vols. i. and ii . (186o–1862) ; Gentleman's
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Magazine for 1732 .

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