Cutthroat Lane, Yaxham, Norfolk
The road name tells a story of a terrible crime from years past, a woman's death immortalised forever in two words: 'Cutthroat Lane'. Peter Poulter, writing in The Journal of 15 October 1932, takes up the tale: 'Cutthroat Drift is a green track: just passable for a car, which turns off the Dereham Road shortly before the sharp corner into Yaxham village. It winds around a little at first, then straightens, and is straight for a long way, rising and falling over small undulations as far as your eye can see... it goes on and on until it bends a complete right angle and joins Mattishall Road.
'Cutthroat Drift is so named because a young woman's throat was cut long years ago. Then listen to this: just beyond the right-angle bend, in a small plantation, years and years ago, the body of a man was hung in chains. This man, as far as one can piece out from history and legend, was not responsible for the murder of the unfortunate young woman. He hung for another grisly tale. His name is popularly supposed to have been Clifton.'
Having enjoyed a skinful of ale at the pub which once stood on Church Lane in Yaxham on February 11 1785, brothers Peter and Henry Seaman began to make their way home across fields which are now Jubilee Park at around 11pm.
According to the Norfolk Chronicle of 19 February 1785: '...they were stopped by a foot-pad, [a highwayman who robs on foot instead of a horse] who knocked them both down with a bludgeon. Peter Seaman was robbed of two guineas and a half in gold, and a crown in silver. Henry Seaman was robbed of his hat only.'
Both men were injured in the attack, Peter more seriously. Shortly afterwards, a man entered a pub in Dereham and an officer spotted blood on his frock coat and arrested him - James Clifton was committed him to Norwich Castle on the oaths of Peter and Henry Seaman and several other witnesses.
Mortally wounded, Peter clung to life for a few days and then died, leaving Clifton - who had previously been imprisoned on one of the Thames hulks at Woolwich when overcrowding at Newgate Prison forced the authorities to turn old merchant ships moored on the Thames into makeshift prisons - facing a murder charge.
Sent to Thetford for the Lent Assizes, he was convicted of murder and sentenced to death on 21 March 1785. The Norwich Mercury of 26 March reported: 'As soon as the judge had passed the awful sentence of the law upon him, said, 'I am to be hanged on Wednesday, but if I was to die this minute, by God, I am not the man' at same time rapped his knuckles on the bar with the greatest violence.' Executed three days later at Norwich Castle, Clifton's body was taken back to Yaxham the next day and placed in a gibbet and then strung more than 30 feet in the air from a tree on Cutthroat Lane and the edge of Babley Moor to act as a deterrent to would-be criminals.
'Hundreds of the country people came to see the ghastly spectacle, and the result was that for many weeks the vicinity resembled a fair,' wrote the Norwich Mercury, 'on Sundays particularly, booths were erected for the sale of drink, and there were some very hilarious scenes.
'The remains hung for 25 year...schoolboys used the corpse as a target, and boasted that they had 'chipped a piece off Cliften'.'
Years later, the field in which Clifton had been hung was ploughed and his skull was found - stories passed down through generations recall villagers passing the skull from hand to hand in wonder, a grisly relic of a dark night in Yaxham's past.
There is some confusion about Peter Seaman's death: his burial on 27 January 1785 according to Parish Records, seems to have been one month before the murder took place!
See also: Mattishall Crime & Punishment 1781- 1859, Weird Norfolk: Cutthroat Lane



