The trial took place in Guildhall (now demolished) in Guildhall Street. The presiding judges were the new mayor Thomas Bele, Sir
Christopher Hales and probably Baron
John Hales. It was a very short trial. A jury confronted with an indictment for High Treason had no alternative but to find Stone guilty. The sentence was handed down on 6 December. Stone was taken to
Westgate tower to await his execution. Usually such a sentence was carried out without delay but in this instance an extraordinary event complicated matters.
Anne of Cleves, who was coming to England to be the fourth wife of King Henry VIII, was due to arrive on Sunday, 7 December 1539, and would be stopping at Canterbury overnight on her way to London. Her arrival, however, was delayed by bad weather. Her visit and Stone's execution probably happened on Saturday, 27 December 1539. Stone's execution was timed to be part of the reception festivities arranged for Anne, despite the shortness of her stay. This conclusion is deduced from the extraordinary expenses for the execution and from the fact that the paraphernalia needed for it were removed only after her departure. However, the historian Michael Benedict Hackett, who was an expert on Stone, questioned whether the execution occurred during Anne of Cleves' time in Canterbury. The bill for the execution amounted to £15.9.11d (fifteen pounds, nine shillings and eleven pence — ). This was a great sum when compared to a previous execution which had cost only six pence. Part of the additional expense for Stone's death was because the place of execution was not Holloway, the traditional site which had a
gibbet permanently in place, but the most striking landmark of the city, the Dongeon, now called the
Dane John, a prominent hillock inside the city walls near the present
Canterbury East railway station. In the account books of Canterbury, there appears an expense of two shillings and six pence "Paid for a half-ton of wood to build the gallows on which Friar Stone was brought to justice." As a prisoner Stone was being carried to a hill outside the city walls. He was not only hanged there but also drawn and quartered. For him being a traitor his head and body were exhibited at the entrance to the city for everyone observing as a warning to other rebels. "Behold I close my apostolate in my blood, in my death I shall find life, for I die for a holy cause, the defence of the Church of God, infallible and immaculate", Stone said as the executioners prepared to do their work. Stone was
hanged, drawn and quartered. His heart and viscera were thrown into the fire. Because he was considered a traitor, his head and body were put on display at the entrance to the city. ==Veneration==