
Last modified: 2021-01-09 by rob raeside
Keywords: black execution flag | 
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Today I watched the excellent movie "The Verdict" from 1946
  (German title: Hier irrte Scotland Yard; starring Sidney Greenstreet, Peter
  Lorre). The story plays in London of 1890; until the very end you can't be
  sure about the murderer. At the beginning a black flag is hoisted over the
  prison to indicate to the public that the convict has been executed (in the
  movie an innocent victim of an intrigue). This raised the question to me what
  tradition those black flags have? Does anybody know more about it? In which
  countries and in which periods did black flags indicate an execution?
  Martin Karner, 21 November 2004
  
Another example is Thomas Hardy's novel 'Tess of the d'Urbervilles. A Pure
  Woman' (1891), where right at the end you have the same scene. Now Hardy's
  world ('Wessex') is imaginary but this may have been real. British list
  members will know more on this subject I suppose.
  Jan Mertens, 21 November 2004
  
I have never heard of this practice in the United Kingdom, although of
  course executions did used to be carried out in public. Would like to know if
  anyone else has information on this. 
Colin Dobson, 22 November 2004
Regarding the article on Black Flag being raised over a prison to indicate 
the execution of a convict, there seems to be a reference to it in the poem 
AUBADE by C S Lewis in book “Poems C S Lewis” edited by Walter Hooper, p 78. 
(Caution- there are two completely different poems by CSL titled AUBADE.)
Emory Johnson, 23 December 2020