Edward Hunt's Forest of Dean Miscellany

Mystery, History and Natural History

    Pingery Tump

(also known as Pingary Tump and Pingry Tump)

 

A gallows once stood on Plump Hill, and another less than a mile away at Pingery Tump on the edge of Wigpool. They hanged sheep-stealers from these gibbets, and no part of England, with hundreds of sheep-owners within a small area, offered such a temptation or opportunity to the sheep-stealer as the Forest of Dean.

 

The last man to be hanged on Pingery Tump was Eli Hatton, and the gallows, until it was dropped, was known as Eli’s Post. By grim irony this sheep-stealer posthumously (if a man can be held to be posthumous while still hanging) brought ruin to Mitcheldean meat market. Mitcheldean by any human means of locomotion seems a tidy step from Pingery, but the spire of the church points up to the forest edge reminding one of its actual proximity, and its distance is nothing to a bird or fly. The flies that had been feeding on Eli’s corpse betook themselves to the fresh carcasses of mutton in Mitcheldean Market. People were becoming squeamish, or were learning the rudiments of hygiene; no one would buy the Mitcheldean mutton and Mitcheldean never hanged another sheep-stealer.

 

The above text is from The Forest of Dean by Brian Waters (publisher: Dent 1951)

 

 

Eli Hatton was hanged at Pingery Tump (Pingry Tump) on 4th September 1723, for the murder of Thomas Twiberville.

 

 

Pingery Tump is marked by the Triangulation Pillar S6279: Wigpool Common at grid reference: SO 65517 19211.

 

 

Key words:   Eli Hatton, Eli’s Post, Mitcheldean,  Pingary Tump, Pingery Tump, Pingry Tump, Plump Hill, Thomas Twiberville, Wigpool

 

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