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Early and Mid-Twentieth Century From
1907 to 1917, six states completely outlawed the death penalty and three limited
it to the rarely committed crimes of treason and first degree murder of a law
enforcement official. However, this reform was short-lived. There was a frenzied
atmosphere in the U.S., as citizens began to panic about the threat of revolution
in the wake of the Russian Revolution. In addition, the U.S. had just entered
World War I and there were intense class conflicts as socialists mounted the first
serious challenge to capitalism. As a result, five of the six abolitionist states
reinstated their death penalty by 1920. (Bedau, 1997 and Bohm, 1999) In
1924, the use of cyanide gas was introduced, as Nevada sought a more humane way
of executing its inmates. Gee Jon was the first person executed by lethal gas.
The state tried to pump cyanide gas into Jon's cell while he slept, but this proved
impossible, and the gas chamber was constructed. (Bohm, 1999) From
the 1920s to the 1940s, there was a resurgence in the use of the death penalty.
This was due, in part, to the writings of criminologists, who argued that the
death penalty was a necessary social measure. In the United States, Americans
were suffering through Prohibition and the Great Depression. There were more executions
in the 1930s than in any other decade in American history, an average of 167 per
year. (Bohm, 1999 and Schabas, 1997) In
the 1950s, public sentiment began to turn away from capital punishment. Many allied
nations either abolished or limited the death penalty, and in the U.S., the number
of executions dropped dramatically. Whereas there were 1,289 executions in the
1940s, there were 715 in the 1950s, and the number fell even further, to only
191, from 1960 to 1976. In 1966, support for capital punishment reached an all-time
low. A Gallup poll showed support for the death penalty at only 42%. (Bohm, 1999
and BJS, 1997 ) | |