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On July 2, 1778, Bathsheba Spooner became the first woman executed in the newly independent United States of America. Her death by hanging in Worcester, Massachusetts, marked a dark chapter in Revolutionary War-era justice and sparked debates about capital punishment, pregnancy, and the rights of the accused that would echo through American legal history for generations to come.
By Matt SchmidtOn July 2, 1778, Bathsheba Spooner became the first woman executed in the newly independent United States of America. Her death by hanging in Worcester, Massachusetts, marked a dark chapter in Revolutionary War-era justice and sparked debates about capital punishment, pregnancy, and the rights of the accused that would echo through American legal history for generations to come.