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The RUTHLESS Execution of Lord Haw Haw: The TENSE and CONTROVERSIAL Final Moments of William Joyce – Britain’s MOST HATED Traitor at the Hands of the LEGENDARY Hangman Albert Pierrepoint That Shocked a Nation 7

EXTREMELY SENSITIVE CONTENT – 18+ ONLY:

This article discusses sensitive historical events related to capital punishment in the United Kingdom, including acts of judicial violence and execution. The content is presented for educational purposes only, to foster understanding of the past and encourage reflection on how societies can prevent similar injustices in the future. It does not endorse or glorify any form of violence or extremism.

William Brooke Joyce (April 24, 1906 – January 3, 1946), known as “Lord Haw-Haw,” was an American-born fascist broadcaster who delivered Nazi propaganda to Britain during World War II via Germany Calling on Radio Hamburg, aiming to demoralize Allied forces and civilians with his mocking Oxford accent and “Germany calling” catchphrase.

Born in New York to Irish parents but raised in Ireland and England, Joyce joined Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists in 1932, becoming propaganda director before fleeing to Germany in 1939 to avoid internment. Broadcasting from 1939 to 1945, he spread defeatism, anti-Semitism, and lies about Allied losses, earning the “Haw-Haw” nickname from a journalist mocking his affected voice.

Captured in May 1945 near Flensburg while gathering firewood—shot in the buttocks during escape—he was tried for high treason in London, convicted despite U.S. citizenship arguments (he lied for a British passport), and sentenced to death. Executed by hanging on January 3, 1946, at Wandsworth Prison by Albert Pierrepoint at age 39—the last for treason in Britain—Joyce’s “ruthless” end marked the close of a traitor’s life that aided Nazi psychological warfare.

Defiant to the end, proud of his “ideals,” his case exemplified wartime justice’s severity. Examining it objectively reveals propaganda’s power, treason’s consequences, and the ethics of executing ideological foes, underscoring lessons on free speech limits and the dangers of fascist collaboration.

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William Joyce was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Michael Joyce (Irish) and Gertrude Emily Brooke (English Protestant), but the family returned to Galway, Ireland, in 1909, then England in 1921 amid Irish independence turmoil. Educated at Birkbeck College, London, Joyce worked as a tutor but gravitated to far-right politics, joining the British Fascisti in 1923 after a razor attack by communists at a Conservative meeting, scarring his face.

In 1932, he joined Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists (BUF), rising to propaganda director by 1934 with fiery anti-Semitic speeches. Sacked in 1937 over financial disputes, Joyce formed the National Socialist League. Tipped off about wartime internment, he fled to Berlin in August 1939 with wife Margaret, obtaining German citizenship.

From September 18, 1939, Joyce broadcast for Reichsrundfunk’s English service, his haughty tone earning “Lord Haw-Haw” from Daily Express critic Jonah Barrington—initially for multiple broadcasters but sticking to Joyce. His scripts gloated over British defeats, predicted bombings, and sowed doubt, reaching 6 million regular listeners (peaking at 9 million). He named POWs to worry families and targeted morale with “big lie” tactics.

As war turned, broadcasts grew desperate; Joyce’s last on April 30, 1945, drunkenly warned of Soviet threats. Fleeing Berlin, captured May 28, 1945, by British soldiers recognizing his voice while injured (shot escaping). Flown to London, tried at Old Bailey September 17–19, 1945, for treason (1940–1943 broadcasts, despite U.S. birth—convicted on false British passport claim granting allegiance).

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Appeals failed; on January 3, 1946, at Wandsworth, Pierrepoint hanged him efficiently—7’4″ drop for 151 lbs, dislocating vertebrae. Joyce’s last words: “I am proud to die for my ideals and I am sorry for the sons of Britain who have died without knowing why.” Body buried in prison, later reinterred in Ireland (1961).

This last treason execution (abolished 1998) reflected WWII’s ideological battles.

Lord Haw-Haw’s ruthless execution—hanged for Nazi propaganda that aided the enemy—closed the chapter on a fascist traitor’s life, the last for treason in Britain. His defiant pride amid defeat exemplified ideological zeal’s cost. By reflecting objectively, we confront propaganda’s wartime role and justice’s boundaries, reinforcing free speech’s limits against harm. Joyce’s story urges vigilance against hate speech, fostering societies that reject extremism through education and dialogue, preventing the spread of divisive ideologies.

Sources

Wikipedia: “William Joyce”

New York Times Archive: “Lord Haw Haw Dies on London Gibbet” (1946)

Flashbak: “When Albert Pierrepoint met Lord Haw-Haw”

Seamus Dubhghaill: “The Execution of William Joyce”

WW2 on Deadline: “End of the line for Lord Haw Haw”

YouTube: “The RUTHLESS Execution Of Lord Haw Haw” (2025)

Additional historical references from academic sources on WWII propaganda.