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See also: English executioner, who as " See also: Jack See also: Ketch " gave the See also: nickname for nearly two centuries to his successors, is believed to have been appointed public hangman in the See also: year 1663
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The first recorded mention of him is in The Plotters Ballad, being Jack Ketch's incomparable See also: Receipt for the Cure of Traytorous Recusants and Wholesome Physick for a Popish Contagion, a See also: broadside published in See also: December 1672
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The execution of See also: William,
See also: Lord See also: Russell, on the 21st of See also: July 1683 was carried out by him in a clumsy way, and a pamphlet is extant which contains his " Apologie," in which he alleges that the prisoner did not "dispose himself as was most suitable" and that he was interrupted while taking aim
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On the See also: scaffold, on the 15th of July 1685, the duke of See also: Monmouth, addressing Ketch, referred to his treatment of Lord Russell, the result being that Ketch was quite unmanned and had to See also: deal at least five strokes with his axe, and finally use a knife, to sever Mon-mouth's See also: head from his shoulders
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In 16861 Ketch was deposed and imprisoned at See also: Bridewell, but when his successor, Pascha See also: Rose, a See also: butcher, was, after four months in the office, hanged at See also: Tyburn, Ketch was reappointed
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He died towards the close of 1686
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