November 4, 1823
Georgia Journal
~excerpt~IMPORTANT TRAIL. THE STATE VS JOHN M.
WILLIAMS. This was an Indictment in Jones Superior Court, at the October Term,
1823, against the prisoner, John M.
Williams, for the murder of his wife; and such was the extraordinary
excitement produced on the public mind by the unparalleled cruelty and depravity
which marked the features of this transaction, that is was not until three full
panels of 43 Jurors each, had been successively summoned and tendered to the
prisoner that a Jury, Omni exceptione juries, were sworn.
To detail this horrid and bloody
transaction in terms suitable to covey a perfect idea of its atrocity, as
developed by the testimony of the witnesses, is to me wholly impossible; I will
therefor only give a brief outline of its most prominent facts.
It appeared that on the 14th day of May
last, the brother-in-law of the prisoner, and his wife, (who was the sister of
the prisoner's wife) were on a visit at the prisoner's house, six or seven miles
from Clinton. A fishing excursion was proposed and agreed to, upon which the
prisoner and his brother-in-law were absent from the house until about six
o'clock in the evening, at which time they returned. Dinner being immediately
prepared for them, they sat down apparently in fine humor. While sitting at the
table, an infant child of the prisoner, then only nine days old, cried, and Mrs.
Williams, its mother, rose and took it up; when the prisoner inquired of her "Mary
whose child is that?" She made him no answer - he repeated the inquiry, and she
answered, smiling, "Mr. Williams you know whose it is." The prisoner immediately
became enraged, and burst forth into a stream of bitter and indelicate abuse,
which modesty forbids me to repeat suffice it to say, they were clearly the
emanations of a jealous spirit. Upon this the brother-in-law interposed, and
threatened to chastise him for his conduct, but in consequence of the entreaties
of the prisoners wife, he desisted. Shortly after this scene the
brother-in-law and his wife departed for their residence in Clinton, the
prisoner having apparently become calm, and acknowledged his error: But upon his
sister-in-law taking leave of him, offered him her hand, he observed, she need
not shake hands with him, but "bid her sister farewell." These words though
ominous, wee not at that time particularly regarded by them, and they departed.
About the distance of a mile from the prisoner's house they met a Mr. Gibson,
and being apprehensive that the prisoner's anger might return after they left
the house, and that he might in the unprotected state of his wife, whip her or
do her some other injury, they requested him (Mr. Gibson) to ride on as fast as
possible to the prisoner's house, and to quiet any angry feeling that might
remain, commence a conversation with him on the subject of his election - the
prisoner having shortly before announced himself, as a candidate for a Justice
of the peace. When Gibson arrived within one fourth of a mile of the prisoner's
house he heard the shrieks of a female apparently in great distress. He hastened
to the spot, and then a spectacle was presented to his view, that for misery and
horror, beggars all description. About twenty or thirty yards from the house he
found the prisoners wife stretched upon the ground, her head almost severed from
her body, there remaining not more that one and a half inches of skin on the
back part of her neck, her hair thrown back and clotted with gore, and in other
respects most dreadfully mangled, and the prisoner standing within five or
six feet of her with a razor in his hand, attempting to cut his own throat. Mr.
Gibson on his arrival found that a Mr. Bazemore and a Mrs. Roquemore had
reached there before him. Mrs. Roquemore stated in her testimony that she
was returning home from Mr. Bazemore's who lived within less than one
fourth of a mile of the prisoner, with an intention of calling on Mrs. Williams,
(the prisoner's wife) when she was informed that the prisoner was killing his
wife. She hurried on as quick as possible and went immediately into the
prisoners house, where she found no person but the infant child, screaming most
piteously on the bed. He took it up, and found laying on the floor, a lady's cap
with the stings cut, and a cape torn into, and many marks of blood in the room.
She heard a noise in the field and went to the spot from whence it proceeded,
and found the prisoner and his wife in the situation described by Gibson. Mr.
Bazemore testified that he had on that day been in company with the prisoner and
his brother-in-law at the river in their fishing excursion. They left him, and
in the evening he passed by the house of the prisoner on his way home. When
passed by he supposed that both the prisoner and his brother-in-law were at the
house. He went home, a distance of something less than one fourth of a mile from
the prisoner's house, and there found Mrs. Roquemore in the act of setting out
home. He immediately sat down to dinner, and before the had finished eating, he
was informed that the prisoner was killing his wife. He sprang from the table
and ran over the the house of the prisoner, and when he reached the yard gate he
saw Mrs. running out greatly distressed, with the prisoners infant in her arms.
At some distance off he saw the prisoner standing with a razor in his right
hand, attempting to cut his own throat, and with his left hand beckoning to him
(the witness) as if he wished him to approach. He went immediately to him, and
found Mrs. Williams as described by Gibson, with the blood yet flowing from the
wound. He exclaimed, "look Williams! see what you have done!" upon which
the prisoner pointed to the corpse of his wife, and groaned hideously. Bazemore
then wrested the razor from him, and Gibson, who arrived at the same moment,
assisted him in carrying the prisoner to the house. In the room of the house,
behind a trunk in which the prisoner kept his razor, was found a two bladed
pocket knife, open and bloody, and upon the lid of the trunk the prints of a
mans bloody hand. The knife was proved to be the prisoners.
From the testimony of other witnesses, and
particularly the ladies who shrouded the deceased, it appeared that many other
severe wound had been inflicted; one on the back of the head which reduced the
part to a jelly, as if with a stick, a large perforation in the temple, and one
or two in her breasts, apparently produced with a pocket knife.
It appeared from the testimony that
the prisoner and his wife had been married between five and six years; that she
was the mother of four children; that she was young, lovely, amiable, and
affectionate, and at the time of her marriage possessed a fortune sufficient to
insure under discreet management, a handsome competence; that he was gay,
likely, and possessed a good understanding; but that under all these
circumstance their matrimonial felicity was very incomplete. From a strange
perversity of disposition on his part, he had frequently treated her most
cruelly. She had several times exhibited marks of the most inhuman violence, but
such was the kindness of her disposition, and the meek forbearance of her
nature, upon the smallest expression of his regret for his cruel and
commonly conduct, he was always sure of her forgiveness nd a quick return of her
warmest affection. When his injurious conduct was continued to ungenerous and
abusive upbraidings, she never murmured or resisted; and when his fiend like
disposition led him to extend it to blows, she only implored his mercy.
It was attempted, on the part of the
counsel for the prisoner, to prove insanity, but they totally failed; all their
witnesses proving that he was a man of strong and vigorous mischief. They then
rested the defense, and in their arguments contended for an acquittal upon two
grounds: First, the danger of convicting upon circumstantial evidence. Under
this head they inqenousely tried to convince the jury that a possibility existed
of the deceased having committed self murder. Secondly, they contended and urged
with a zeal deserving a better cause, that if the prisoner did commit the
murder, the circumstance attending it were so horrible to themselves as to prove
conclusively, that he must have been in a state of mental derangement-that no
human being possessing the fullness of his reason, could conceive, much less
execute an act of such dreadful atrocity. At eleven o'clock at night, the trial,
having occurred the whole of the two preceding days, the argument closed, and
the judge having in an impartial and impressive manner instructed the jury in
all the points of law which could possibly be involved in the case, they retired
to their room, and in five minutes returned into court, and amidst the apparent
stillness of death pronounced a verdict of GUILTY.
The prosecution was ably conducted by
Yelveton P. King, Esq. Solicitor General, and Messrs. Rockwell, Cuthbert,
and Sparks, assistant counsel. Their arguments to the jury were clear,
impressive, and pathetic; and if the prisoner had a heart susceptible of
feeling, that heart must have been lacerated. ,,,,
The defence was conducted
ingeniously and ably by Messrs Strong & Holt, and Adam G. Satfold,
Esq.......
October 17, 1826
Georgia Journal
~excerpts~A Proclamation.
WHEREAS I have received official information of a murder having been committed
in the county of Jones in the State, on the body of two negroes,
Jane and Moses, the property of Ebenezer Z. Duffey, by said
EBENEZER Z. DUFFEY and BENJAMIN DOWNING, of the county aforesaid
and it appearing by the report of the Coroner, that the said Benjamin Downing
has been arrested, but that Ebenezer Z. Duffey has absconded. Now therefore in
order that the said Ebenezer Z. Duffey may be brought to trial for the crime
wherewith he is charged, I have brought proper to issue this my Proclamation,
hereby offering a reward of TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS to any person or
persons who shall apprehend and deliver him to the Sheriff of the county
aforesaid-......
G. M. TROUP. By the Governor: DANIEL NEWNAN,
Sec'y of State. Note. Ebenezer Z. Duffey is supposed to be about 30 years of
age, is 5 feet 7 or 8 inches high, dark complexion, black hair, small black
eyes, and with a considerable stoop in the shoulders. Sept. 26
August 8, 1832
Macon Telegraph
~excerpts~ Whereas I have received official
information, that on the 28th day of June last, in the county of Jones, in said
State a murder, was committed on the body of Zachariah
Williamson, by JOHN HUNT of said county.....the said John Hunt and
George H. Sims have fled from justice..reward of TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS for
each....WILSON LUMPKIN, by the Governor E. Hamilton, Secretary of State.. John
Hunt is about 28 years of age, red complexion, red hair, grey eyes and about 5
feet 8 or 10 inches tall...
November 27, 1838
Macon Telegraph
SUPPOSED MURDER. On the 12th inst. the body of a
man was discovered in a hollow log, near Johnson's Mills, in Jones county,
apparently having been in that situation eight or ten days., On the body were
sixteen or seventeen cuts and stabs; showing conclusively that he must have come
to his death by foul means. Some papers were found on him, by which it appeared
that his name was Elias M. Isaacs,
-some of them were bills for the purchase of Jewelry in Albany, Utica, and
Syracuse, N. Y. A note was found, addressed to him by a Mr. Whitney
of New York, who appeared to have been his counsel in some difficulty he had
been involved in respect to the purchase, or possession of Jewelry.
The only light that has been elicited
respecting him, is, that a person who was supposed to be a French Jew answering
to his name and description, was in this city a few days, and left here on the
5th ins., in a Jersey wagon, with a man by the name of Williams,
a Ventriloquist and slight of hand performer; and another individual, who
appeared to be an Italian. While here the murdered man was engaged in peddling
Jewelry, and claimed to have the value of three to four thousand dollars in
waters, Jewelry and money; which probably was the immediate cause of his murder.
No money, or jewelry was found with him, except a ring, which he wore, which has
been recognized as belonging to him, by persons who had notice it. A wagon, and
individuals answering the description of those who left here with him, were seen
at the place where the body was found, the morning after they left here.
Of course strong suspicious are fixed on
the persons who accompanied the murdered man from this place, and the public
would do well to be on a lookout for the perpetrators of such a foul deed. -
Messenger.
February 12, 1839
Southern Recorder
~~excerpts~..that in the month of November last,
a murder was committed in the county of Jones, in this State, upon the body of a
man supposed to have been named Elias
or Ichabod M. Isaacs, by J. W. COWLES and JOHN DICKERSON,
and that the said COWLES and DICKERSON have fled from justice: ..reward of Three
Hundred Dollars...and double that amount for both...GEORGE R. GILMER. By the
Governor: WM. A. TENNILLE, Secretary of State
DESCRIPTION.- COWLES is represented as
being about five feet seven or eight inches high, a very trim built well made
ma, very active and upright in his walk. He is travelling through the country as
a Juggler and Ventriloquist, and is a native of Connecticut. His real name
JULIUS WILLIAM COWLES, but has frequently changed his name, going sometimes
by the name of WILLIAMS, sometimes by that of COWLES or COLE, and then by
spelling his name backwards and taking the name of SELWOC.
DICKERSON is a tall bowlegged and
very stout man, has a very fair complexion, light hair, blue or light eyes,
broad shoulders, with two double teeth on the upper jaw in front; chews a great
deal of tobacco. February 5, 1839
HOMICIDE - On Wednesday last, a young man of the name of Choate, was killed in Jones county from a pistol shot discharged from the hand of an itinerant peddler of the name of Morris. There are various accounts as to whether the pistol was discharged by accident or design. Morris has, however, been arrested and committed to jail. Geo. Citizen.
October 30, 1855
Southern Recorder
Morris Abraham, indicted for the
murder of Richard J. Choate of Jones co., was tried at the October term
of the late Superior Court of that county, Judge Hardeman presiding, and
sentenced to four years imprisonment in the State Penitentiary - the Jury having
returned a verdict of voluntary manslaughter.
September 13, 1859
Macon Telegraph
Jackson Roberts Committed
The examination into the case of
Jackson Roberts, charged with the murder of his brother in Jones county,
on the 30th of August, took place on Friday last. After hearing the evidence,
the prisoner was committed to Jail to answer the charge of murder. Justices
Thos. S. Humphreys, John S. Humphreys, and Thos. Burdin,
presiding.
April 28, 1860
Macon Telegraph
Clinton, April 22, 1860. Mr. Clisby. Jones
Superior Court adjourned this morning after a most arduous week of labor, and
although it was Sabbath Judge Harris passed sentence upon Jackson
Roberts, who had been found guilty of involuntary man slaughter, after a
fifty five hours test of muscle and endurance by the Jury that tried the case.
His sentence was three years in the Penitentiary.
August 27, 1860
Macon Telegraph
Clinton, Aug. 24th, 1860
Mr. Clisby: On Saturday, John J. Maddox
was brought before Justices Hascall, Childs, Butler and Middlebrooks, charged
with killing Levi A. Loyd on the 21st
inst., and after hearing evidence in the case was committed to our county jail
to await his trial for murder at our next Superior Court.
George W. Maddox, was also
arraigned before the same Justices, charged with an assault with intent to
murder Eli S. Gray; upon an investigation in default of bail, he was also
committed to jail. These men are brothers, and had met at the grocery mentioned
in my last, together with others, to attend a shooting match for beef, but
unfortunately it resulted in a shooting match of quite a different
character. Cause for the whole affair, bad blood and strychnine whiskey. The
weapons used besides the black bottles were double barrel guns. Yours, B
October 24, 1860
Macon Telegraph
John J. Maddox, convicted last week
in the Superior Court of Jones County for the murder of Levi A. LLoyd,
was yesterday brought to Macon by Sheriff Balkcom of Jones county and committed
to Bibb county jail to await his execution on the 7th December next, the Jones
county jail being considered insecure.
September 29, 1863
Southern Recorder
During the term, John Maddox, who
was indicted for the murder of ___Loyd, in Jones county, and whose case
had been transferred to Baldwin, pleaded guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and
was sentenced by Judge Harris to ten years imprisonment in the
Penitentiary. He had been convicted at a previous term, and a new trial was
ordered by the Supreme Court which ruled the offense to be manslaughter, from
testimony adduced. He had been three years in Jail.
December 4, 1877
Macon Telegraph
Shocking Murder of a Young Girl in Jones County.
Miss Addie
Hodge, a daughter of Mr. Samuel Hodge, an old and highly respected
citizen of the upper part of Jones county, was shot and killed, while on a visit
to her brother-in-law, Mr. Robert Gordon, by some unknown party, about
dark Saturday evening, the 24th inst. WHile the family of Mr. Gordon were at tea
in the kitchen, a house adjacent and directly behind the dwelling from the road,
the discharge of a gun was heard in the direction of the road. Miss Hodge at the
time happened to be passing from the back part of the dwelling toward the fire
place and received the ball, it taking effect on the side of her head,
just above the ear and ranging upward. She survived about an hour. It is
supposed that the shot was aimed at some one in the kitchen.
Miss Hodge was about fifteen years of age,
greatly esteemed for her many estimable traits of character, and her untimely
death has cast a gloom over the entire community. The funeral service took place
yesterday at Cany Creek church where the remains were interred. The Rev. Mr.
Bazemore officiated.
July 29, 1884
Union and Recorder
Jones County, Clinton, July 25, 1884
Bob Jackson, one of the
negroes supposed to have been implicated in the murder of an old and aged negro
man, Abner Clewer,
who was found naked and dead early in January 1883, died to-day near the scene
of this dastardly crime.
November 18, 1884
Union and Recorder
Terrible Tragedy in Jones.
News has reached this city, by a gentleman
who visited Jones county, last Sunday, that a terrible tragedy was enacted on
the old Bivins homestead on that day. Col.
Benj. Beck, well known in this city, who married the widow of James W.
Stubbs, was murdered by his step-sons, Stephen and James Stubbs,
and Col. Beck's son Benjamin,
was fatally shot. A coroner's inquest was held and a verdict of murder was
rendered. The jury arrested the men and held them until the Sheriff arrived when
they were taken to Clinton and confined in jail. We do not know the cause of the
trouble. The parties all lived on the same plantation. The young Stubbses armed
themselves with shotguns and pistols and killed Co. Beck and mortally wounded
his son, as above stated. It is said, neither Col. Beck nor his son was armed.
To what deplorable results do the nursing of bad passions lead! The parties to
this heart-rending tragedy are connected to the best families of the State, Col.
Beck was a gallant Confederate officer.
November 25, 1884
Union and Recorder
Further Incidents of the Jones County Murder
we copy the following from the Macon
Telegraph & Messenger of the 18th:
"The news reached Macon last Sunday
evening of a terrible tragedy in Jones county. An order was brought into Clay's
establishment for two coffins and an inquiry revealed the fact that Colonel
Benjamin Beck, a well-to-do farmer of Jones county, and his young son, of
the same name, had been killed by two brothers, Jim and Stephen Stubbs,
also farmers.
The details of the killing were difficult
to obtain, owing to the fact that it occurred in the country far removed from
the railroad. From Dr. W. A. Thomas, of Baldwin county, who, with Dr.
Pursely, was sent for to attend young Beck, and who heard his dying
statement, the following facts were learned:
The parties to the tragedy were Col.
Benjamin Beck, Benjamin Beck, Jr., and Jim and Stephen Stubbs. Col. Beck married
a Mrs. Stubbs, the mother of Jim and Stephen. Ben Beck, Jr. and Tom Beck were
half-brothers to the Stubbs, who were Col. Beck's step-sons. All of them farmed
on the same land.
There is no definite information as
to the origin of the trouble. The most probable story is that the Becks had a
patch of corn between two patches of corn belonging to the Stubbs'. It is
claimed that the Stubbs' fed their stock from the Becks' corn instead of their
own, and this led to a quarrel or an assault on last Friday. On Sunday morning
Tom Beck was sent by his father to Clinton, 9 miles distance, for a warrant for
the Stubbs'. While he was gone the quarrel; was renewed in the yard, and
resulted in the instant killing of Col. Beck. He received a load of small shot
in his left side and a load of buckshot in his right side. After Col. Beck fell
he was shot twice in the back of the head with a pistol, both balls lodging in
his brain.
Young Beck was not killed outright. He
received seven gun shot wounds, one of which would have been fatal. There were
five balls in the right side, one through the spine and stomach, and two through
the left arm near the wrist. He did not fall at first shot and ran, asking the
Stubbs brothers not to kill him, but they continued to shoot at him until the
wounds mentioned above were inflicted. He died in great pain Sunday afternoon at
half-past 4 o'clock. Stephen Stubbs had a double-barreled gun, one barrel loaded
with small shot and the other with buckshot. Both men had American bulldog
pistols.
The Stubbses went into the house
after the shooting. The wife of Stephen went out into the year and assisted
young Beck to the porch of the house, where he was laid down on some
cotton. The body of Col. Beck remained where it fell in the yard until the
coroner's jury removed it in the afternoon.
The heavy and rapid firing caused the
neighbors to investigate the cause of it and soon the news was flying over the
country. One man went to Clinton after a warrant, one for physicians, and soon
the neighborhood was aroused. The warrant was sworn out before justice James
Andrews, who gave it to Sheriff Phillips to serve. The sheriff summoned a posse
and proceeded at once to the Beck place, but the Stubbs were arrested without
difficulty. The remained at the house until about noon, when they started off,
and were prevented from escaping by the sheriff. They were taken at once to the
jail at Clinton, where they are now lodged.
THE INQUEST
In the afternoon the coroner's
inquest was held. Young Beck was able to make a statement, which embodied the
facts given above. He also repeated this statement to Dr. Thomas. In the
evidence before the jury it transpired that young Beck's gun had been taken from
the shelf in the house and broken on a rock a short distance away. It had not
been discharged.
The jury rendered a verdict that the
deceased (Colonel Beck) came to his death by gunshot wounds inflicted at the
hands of James and Stephen Stubbs, and in their opinion it was murder.
Colonel Beck went into the Confederate arm
as captain of the Baldwin Volunteers, (not Jordon Guards, as stated by the
Telegraph & Messenger.) He was afterwards made Colonel of the Ninth Georgia
Regiment. He bore a reputation, as did his two sons, of being a peaceable,
law-abiding man, never molesting anyone, and for the past few years living
almost in retirement from the world.
Colonel Isaac Hardeman has been
engaged for the defense."
April 25, 1906
Union Recorder
ALONZO HADDOCK'S CASE CONTINUED UNTIL
FALL. Young Man Who Killed Burrell Bush Not Tried Because of Illness of
an Important Witness.
One of the largest crowds ever seen in the
Jones county court house was present at the opening of the Alonzo Haddock murder
case, at Clinton Wednesday. The court house and yard were filled with a crowd of
eager listeners.
The case is one of great local interest,
Bush was shot by Haddock at Haddock station last month. The killing it will be
remembered, grew out of a romance culminating in the marriage of Bush's son and
Haddock's sister. The tragedy created a great sensation.
The trial was begun at 8:30 and several
witnesses were heard, but before progressing very far, the case was continued
until the October term, as one of the material witnesses, Mr. Thomas, who is
alleged to have seen the shooting, was ill and the doctor certified that she
would not be in condition to appear at court for some time. At this announcement
most of the crowd left the court room and remained about the streets and stores
talking.
The people of Jones county are divided in
their opinions about the affair, some sympathize with Haddock. others regard his
action as wholly unwarranted.
October 23, 1906
Union Recorder
Judge John T. Allen spent last week
in Jones County, where he was engaged in the defense of Alonzo Haddock,
who was charged with murder. Haddock was found not guilty.
August 9, 1910
Union Recorder
TRAGEDY IN JONES CO. LAST FRIDAY. The Morton
Brothers Shoot and Killed the Ethredges at Greys Station.
An awful tragedy was enacted at
Grays in Jones county last Friday.
On last Friday a reunion and barbecue was
held at Grays, and the shooting took place in the afternoon. From Saturday's
Macon Evening News we get the following:
While the barbecue was in progress
shortly after four o'clock, Steve and Morris
Ethridge and Clayton Kitchens, a kinsman, drove to the store of
Luther Morton, not far from the depot at the railroad station, and renewed a
quarrel over the negro boy who had gone from the farm of
Will Morton to that of Steve
Ethridge
a week before. Will Morton, it was said, fired at Steve Ethridge on a former
occasion, three times about this negro boy, named Seabrook,
and when the barbecue was on at its fullest yesterday the row was renewed.
Word went back and forth tat one side intended to kill the others at sight. It
was kept up till the Ethridges and Kitchens drove to the Morton store and
Kitchens offered a fist fight for a settlement. Will Morton engaged Kitchens and
the two fought several minutes before anything occurred elsewhere to mar the
occasion. Finally, as the Mortons claim, Kitchens was being cornered and choked
by Morton when the Ethridges began and interference. Quick as a flash all four
Morton brothers and the two Ethridges and Kitchens were in a fight to the death.
Shots rang out so thick and fast that it
was impossible for even eye witnesses to tell exactly how it all happened. When
the firing ceased Steve Ethridge lay with his feet on the sidewalk and his body
extended into the street with half his head and face shot off. He was dead and
his life blood was spread in a horrible manner all about the ground.
Morris Ethridge lay dead, too, with three
pistol shots penetrating his body, one in the mouth, another through the heart
and one through the abdomen. Both men never breathed to utter a word.
The fist fight was lost in the thick of
the firing. It was said Kitchens called out that he was licked just as the other
interference came and this turned the participants to the most serious
matter of slaying an assailant and protecting self.
The front of the store this morning
show evidence of a terrible battle. The thick show window glass has been
perforated with shots and it is said the clear evidence of the fire that was
being poured in at the Mortons by the Etheridges is best shown here.
November 19,
1910
Macon Telegraph
IKE RUSHING TO HANG DEC. 16 IN JONES CO.
Juliette, Ga, Nov. 18 - Judge Lewis has sentenced
Ike Rushing, the negro charged with the murder of Bailiff Bass in
Jones county in April, 1909, to hang on Dec. 16 in the jail. No one will be
allowed to witness the hanging. Rushing was convicted of murder last April and
sentenced to hang, but his attorneys appealed his case to the supreme court. The
new trial was refused by the court.
August 17, 1914
Macon Telegraph
JONES COUNTY NEGRO MURDERED YESTERDAY
James Ward,
Negro, Who Shot Him, Makes Escape-Killing Occurs on J. W. Humphries
Place, Above Macon.,
J. W. Humphries, a well known
planter residing in the northwest portion of Jones county, just beyond the Bibb
county line and seven miles from Macon, notified Sheriff J. R. Hicks yesterday,
that James Ward, a negro, who has been working near Holton, shot and killed
another negro man residing on Mr. Humphries' place, yesterday morning about i
o'clock. The name of the dead negro could not be learned in Macon.
The case is outside the jurisdiction
of the Bibb county sheriff since the murder occurred in Jones county, but Mr.
Humphries came here to report it, owing to the greater distance to Gray. He
requested Sheriff Hicks to notify Sheriff Ethridge, at Gray, and several
attempts were made to do so yesterday but because of the telephone and telegraph
offices being closed the Jones county sheriff could not be reached. He will
probably not know of the murder until today.
The killing is said to have ben the result
of a dispute over a child. The dead negro was shot three times through the face
and mouth, his assailant using a pistol.
After the shooting Ward made his escape
and it was thought he might come to Macon. Mr. Humphries for that reason
hastened here to notify Sheriff Hicks to be on the lookout for him.
Deputy Sheriff Lon Williams said yesterday
hat the murdered Negro was a prisoner in the Bibb county jail about a year ago
but he could not remember his name.
May 29, 1915
Macon Telegraph
MURDERER OF WAYSIDE MAN STILL FUGITIVE
Sheriff Etheridge Will Pay Reward For Sam Strong.
Sam Strong, the negro boy who last
Saturday night shot and killed Thomas
Green White, a merchant at Wayside, Jones county, is still at large and
Sheriff R. N. Etheridge, of Jones county, is doing everything in his power
to apprehend the fugitive.
Sheriff Etheridge states that
the negro is of ginger cake color, about 20 years old, 5 feet, 8 or 9 inches in
height and weighs about 140 or 150 pounds. He received two pistol wounds in the
duel with Mr. White, one through the point of the chin and another in the left
shoulder.
Sheriff Etheridge will pay a reward of $24
for his arrest and detention until he can come for him.
July 6, 1915
Union Recorder
JONES MOBS ARE SCOURING COUNTY. In Search of
Negroes Who Murdered Silas Turner
a Young White Man.
Silas Turner, a young white man,
was shot in the back of the head Saturday and instantly killed by a negro named
Brooks.
The murder was one of the most
cold-blooded, premeditated murders in the history of Jones county.
Turner went to the home of Brooks, a
negro, to collect a bill and Walter Brooks, John Richey and Will
Gordon, according to confession by Gordon, made to Deputy Sheriff C. E.
Roberts, of Jones county after being brought to the Bibb county jail early
Monday morning, plotted to kill Turner.
Shortly afterward Turner again
appeared and started to make a search of the house. When he turned his back,
Brooks, according to Gordon, shot him in the back of the head with a charge from
a shot gun killing him instantly. The negroes then rolled the body over, took a
pistol from the dead man's pocket and fired on cartridge, and then placed the
pistol beside the body to make it appear a case of suicide. They then escaped.
Gordon was later captured and with two others negroes, Square Thomas and Scott
Farrar, brought to the Bibb jail for safe keeping. Brooks and Richey are still
at large.
A mob organized to search for the negroes
killed and negro by the name of Greene
and his son Sunday night. These negroes were not connected with the crime.
Rumors of other negroes being killed
have come to the sheriff but have not been verified.
(see October 23, 1915)
July 7, 1915
Macon Telegraph
Jones County Quiet, But Another Negro Is Jailed
Gray, July 6 - The county commissioners of Jones
county today ordered a coffin sent to Round Oak for the burial of a body of a
negro that was found in the roadside there earlier in the day. The negro had
been shot to death. He is the third victim of the series of killings to avenge
the murder of Silas Turner, the young planter, who was killed on Sunday
morning.
Jones county is quite tonight. In
the jail here is Peter Thurman, who is alleged to have had a hand in the
murder of Turner. Thurman is held on a charge of murder. The three negroes
locked up in the Bibb county jail and this one are all that have been taken into
custody, and the authorities of Jones and Jasper counties are search for others.
The latest victim of violence was known
as Earl Palmer, at whose home on the
John King plantation Mr. Turner was slain. The negro's body was found at the
roadside at Round Oak early this morning.
Sheriff Etheridge stated tonight before
leaving for Macon that he looked for no more trouble in connection with the
case. He felt sure that all of the negroes suspected of being in the plot to
kill Turner would be under arrest soon.
Witness Brought Here.
Sheriff Etheridge, of Jones county,
arrived at the Bibb county jail last night with Peter Thurman, a negro, who
admits he was present when Silas Turner, the Jones county farmer, was murdered
last Sunday. He denies having any part in the shooting.
Thurman told Sheriff Etheridge last night
that the negro, Earl Palmer, found dead beside the road near Round Oak
yesterday, was the one who took Mr. Turner's pistol from his pocket after he had
been shot dead and after firing one shot from its replaced it beside the body to
make his death look like a case of suicide.
Four negroes are now in jail here in
connection with the murder, but Walter Brooks, who is alleged to have done the
shooting, is still at large.
July 10, 1915
Macon Telegraph
NEGRO KILLS HIS WIFE ON JONES COUNTY FARM.
Hobbles Across Country on Crutches to "get" Wife.
Gray, July 3 - Dooly
Farrar, a crippled negro hobbled to the home of John Tom Williams,
ten miles from here, during last night and laid in wait for his wife, a cook in
the Williams home, to appear. When she arrived this morning Farrar drew a
38-calibre revolver and shot the woman dead. The body fell inside the kitchen
door.
Sheriff Etheridge was notified of the
shooting and hastened to the scene, finding Farrar had already been taken in
charge by people on the Williams place. The sheriff brought the negro to the
county jail, where he is held on a charge of murder.
Negro Uses Crutches.
Farrar is practically helpless. He uses
crutches and it is said spent most of the night in going across country roads to
the Williams home in search of his wife, with whom he had quarreled.
Two more negroes implicated in the murder
of Silas Turner, a Jones county farmer, were jailed here tonight.
October 23,
1915
Savannah Tribune
WHITE MEN INDICTED FOR MURDERING NEGROES
Gray, Ga., Oct 20. The Jones county grand jury in
investigating the wholesale lynching of four Negroes here several weeks ago,
following the murder of Silas Turner, a white farmer, to-day indicted two
white men.
On the day following the murder of Turner
and aged Negro named Lonzo Green and his son were trying to reach
their home at Wayside when they were shot to death.
Jim Green and Woodall
Green, white, and cousins, were indicted today, charged with the murder of
these two Negroes. Woodall Green was arrested by the sheriff and is in jail. The
other man has not been located.
September 4, 1918
Macon Telegraph
NEGRO CONFESSES SERIES OF CRIMES. John
Gilham, Alias Thomas, Broke Jail in Jones -
Then Attacked Women - Caught by Negroes
John Gilham, alias John Thomas,
negro, who broke away from the Jones county chain gang on August 18, and who
since that time has attempted assault on two white women, one negro woman and
two negro girls was caught yesterday morning by Charlie Pitts, and Charlie
Jackson, two negro workmen, near Lakeside Park. The negro was brought to the
city barracks, where he was later taken charge of by Sheriff T. C.
Middlebrooks and Deputy Sheriff T. A. Roberts of Jones county.
Gilham confessed to his crimes and also to
the murder of a negro in Warren county six years ago. The sheriff of Warren
county has been looking for him for some time.
A year ago Gilham was arrested and charged
with a felony, being sentenced to the chain gang in Jones county for one year,
his identity not being known ny the authorities at Gray where he was tried.
Located in Swamps
On August 18 Gilham broke from the
gang and in the eight hours following attempted assaults on five women in Jones
county. He was followed by a large number of farmers of Jones county and traced
into the swamps in the vicinity of Lakeside where he has been for several days,
coming out yesterday morning, when he was seen by the two negroes who caught
him, and who notified the police authorities immediately. The feeling in Jones
county is pretty high, both among whites and blacks, and trouble is expected.
The reward which was on the negro
will be given to the to negroes Charlie Jackson and
Charlie Pitts, who were thanked and made to see the greatness of their
deed by the police last night. Both negroes are from Macon and are employed by
the public health department.
September 5, 1918
Macon Telegraph
Negroes Join With Whites in Lynching Negro for
Assaults
John Gilman, Caught Near Macon, Is Taken From
Officers Near Jones County Jail and Shot. Attacks Made on White and Colored
Women Last Month - Coroner's Jury Investigates.
Gray, Sept. 4 - Taken from Jones County and Macon
officers near the Jones County jail here last night, John Gilham, alias John
Thomas, a negro charged with several criminal assaults upon white and
colored women in this county, was lynched by a part of unknown men. Sheriff
T. C. Middlebrooks today said he is positive there were several negroes in
the party. Gilham's body was found in a ditch this morning. Half a dozen or more
bullets had pierce it. There were indications the negro had been killed in woods
nearby and dragged to the ditch.
Chief Bowden Along.
Accompanied by Chief of Police
Bowden and Detective Newberry, of the Macon department, Sheriff Middlebrooks and
Deputy Sheriff T. A. Roberts left Macon last night in an automobile with the
prisoner, caught near Macon yesterday morning by two negro men and turned
over to Macon officers. When the outskirts of Gray were reached the sheriff sent
a man ahead to see if the way was clear and upon receiving a favorable report
the officers continued the trip. The jail was being approached when without
warning from all sides a crowd closed in on the automobile, covering the
officers with guns.
The negro was taken from the car and,
still handcuffed, lynch near Gray.
"Death at the hands of persons
unknown" was the verdict of the coroner's jury, returned after an investigation
conducted today.
Gilham escaped from the Jones County gang
last month and shortly after gaining freedom is alleged to have attempted
assault on two white women, one negro woman and two negro girls, all in the same
vicinity. Searching parties were organized and had hunted through a wide section
of country when the authorities were notified from Macon yesterday of Gilham's
arrest.
October 2, 1920
Macon Telegraph
JAILED HERE ON MURDER CHARGE. Former Inmate of
Asylum Is Held As Slayer of Kitchens.
FAMILY FEUD CAUSES TROUBLE.
Watson Parker, white man who is
said to have been in the asylum for the insane at Milledgeville on three
different occasions, was brought to the Bibb County Jail yesterday by Sheriff
J. C. Middlebrooks of Jones county, and is held charged with murder in
connection with the killing of
L. C. Kitchens, which occurred Thursday afternoon three miles east of
Haddock.
Witnesses to the killing say that Kitchens
and Parker had just engaged in a fist difficulty previous to the shooting,
Kitchens getting the better of the affair. Carson Parker,
brother of the man who did the shooting, is said to have approached and inquired
as to the trouble.
Kitchens replied that he had just whipped
one man and would whip another and lifted a heavy rock to strike
Carson Walker, when his brother, Watson, is said to have fired a
double-barrel shot gun which caused the death of Kitchens. Ill feeling is said
to have existed between the two families for some time.
When seen at the jail by a reported,
Parker declined to make a statement about the killing.
October 19, 1920
Macon Telegraph
"NO-BILL" AGAINST PARKER
Will Be Taken Back to Jones County Today and
Released.
The Jones county grand jury, investigating
the death of J. C. Kitchens, who was shot last month by T. W. Parker,
returned a no-bill against Parker and he will be carried to Jones county this
morning and released. Parker was brought to the Bibb County Jail after the
killing and has been confined here since.
The killing of Kitchens occurred after
Kitchens and a brother of Parker's had engaged in a fist difficulty. Parker
contended he shot in self-defense, claiming Kitchens was advance on him with
a heavy rock when he fired a shotgun at the advancing man.
October 23, 1920
Macon Telegraph
HUDSON IS GUILTY; RELEASED ON BOND. Jones County
Farmer Involuntary Manslaughter Verdict.
FILES MOTION FOR NEW TRial. Jury Recommends
Person Term of One Year and One Day.
Gray, Oct. 22. The trial of
Charles N. Hudson, charged with murder, came to an end in the Jones county
Superior Court this morning when the jury returned a verdict of guilty of
involuntary manslaughter with recommendation. The defendant was sentenced to a
year and a day in prison.
Hudson was charged with
slaying Miss Drusilla Devlin
on October 3, the indictment alleging that he crushed an automobile, which he
was driving, into another machine in the death of Miss Devlin; that he was in an
intoxicated condition at the time, and that he wad driving his automobile at a
reckless rate of speed.
The defendant, who is a prosperous Jones
county farmer, received hi sentence from Judge J. B. Park without any signs of
emotion. His wife and his little daughter broke down while the sentence was
being imposed and sobbed for several minutes.
Motion For New Trial.
His attorneys lost but little time
in filing a motion for a new trial and their client was given his freedom on a
bond of $2,000. No date for hearing of the motion was set by the court.
The accident, which result in the
conviction of the young farmer, occurred on the Milledgeville road at a point
known as the geographical censer of this State. Miss Devlin was a member
alongside of an automobile, the property of Louis Long, when the
automobile driven by Hudson and traveling at an alleged reckless speed crashed
into Long's car. The young woman was caught between the two machines and crushed
badly. She died in Macon the following day.
This affair, spurred on by several fatal
accidents in Macon and throughout this section of the State a short time prior
to October 3, caused a wave of indignation against excessive automobile speeding
in Bibb County.
May 9, 1921
Macon Telegraph
GOSSIP IS FATAL. Leads to Killing of One Negro
and Wounding of Another.
Tom Davis, middle aged negro
man, is at the Macon Hospital with a bullet wound through his left thigh, and Chris
Morris, negro, is dead with six bullet holes through his body as the result
of a pistol battle yesterday afternoon at about 2:30 o'clock between the two on
the farm of H. M. McKay, in Jones County.
According to Davis, the affray
resulted from gossip which one negro woman told concerning himself and the wife
of the dead negro. He said that he had turned and was going away from Morris
when the latter shot him through the thigh. He turned and sent six bullets
through Morris then, he declared, in self defense.
October 2, 1921
Macon Telegraph
Year After Accident Damage
Suit Is Set Mrs. Devlin's Civil Action Comes Up in City Court Monday.
The civil damage suits growing out of the
automobile accident on the Clinton road on October 3, 1920, in which
Miss Drusilla Devlin was killed, will be tried in City Court on Monday,
just one year to a day from the time of the accident.
Mrs. L. G. Devlin, mother of
Miss Drusilla Devlin, through her attorneys, Defore and Estes, sued C. M.
Hudson, who is represented by Judge John P. Ross, for $15,000. Louis F.
Long, whose car was damaged in the accident, also asks for $559. 35.
The accident occurred on a Sunday
afternoon when Louis F. Long and his wife, Mrs. Devlin, and her daughter
were out for an automobile ride. They stopped at a stake on the Clinton road
which indicates the geographical center of the State, and Miss Devlin was taking
pictures with a kodak, when a car driven by Hudson and said to have been running
a high speed, rounded a curve at the top of a hill and crashed into the party.
Miss Devlin was crushed between the Hudson and the Long machines, one of her
limbs being cut completely off. She died later at a local hospital.
Hudson was arrested on a charge of
manslaughter and was convicted by a jury and given one year. The case was
appealed and the conviction was affirmed. Hudson served several months on a
chaingang when the Supreme Court held in another case that the "speed law" under
which Hudson was convicted was unconstitutional. The Governor then pardoned
Hudson.
December 27, 1921
Macon Telegraph
GRAY NEGRO LOSES HIS LIFE OVER TEN CENTS
Gray, Ga., Dec. 26 - Pete
Brooks, a negro, lost his life here yesterday afternoon over a 10-cent best.
Pulaski Hogan, a negro, is in the Jones county jail here held on the charge
of murder. The two men quarreled, it is said, and Brooks shot at Hogan with a
pistol, Hogan then wielded his knife. Hogan surrendered at the jail and claimed
self-defense.
August 29, 1922
Macon Telegraph
J. W. WESTBOOK SLAIN. Macon Man, Killed at
Juliette, is Buried There. Juliette, Ga., Aug. 28. John
William Westbrook, of Macon, 28 years of age, died Sunday afternoon at 5
o'clock as a result of being shot Sunday morning with a revolver by
Joe Jackson, carpenter employed by the Juliette Miller Company. The
bullet penetrated the bowels. The shooting occurred in front of the milling
company's store at Glover's across the river from here and is said to have
resulted from previous bad feeling between the two men, who, it is said, engaged
in a fight several weeks ago at Glovers when Westbrook was working at the cotton
factory there. Westbrook is the son of the lat John Westbrook who formerly lived
here. Immediately after the shooting Jackson went to Gray and surrendered to the
Jones County authorites. Westbrook was buried .......day afternoon in the
cemetery of the Juliette Methodist Church
October 21, 1922
Macon Telegraph
JOE JACKSON IS GIVEN ACQUITTAL. Found Not
Guilty of Murder of J. W. Westbrooks. TRIAL IS HELD A GRAY. Glovers Scene
of Killing, Which Took Place August 27.
Gray, Ga. Oct. 20. A verdict of acquittal was
returned here this afternoon in the case of the State against Joe Jackson,
charged with the murder of J. W. Westbrooks. The case had been on trial
for two days, but it took the jury only about a half hour to make up its
verdict.
The killing of Westbrooks took place
at Glovers on August 27, 1922, and followed a feud of long standing between the
two men. Both were employes of the Juliette Milling Company.
Jackson's plea at his trial wwas
that he shot in self defense, fearing tht Westbrooks was about to attack hime
with a knife and alleging numerous threats against him by Westbrooks.
The two men had a fight some time
previous to the killing, in which Westybrooks is alleged to have beaten Jackson
up pretty bady. Westbrooks was discharged by the mill management. He is alledged
to have returned later and made threats against Jackson. On August 27 Jackson
and Westbrooks met in front of the C. A. Lawrence
Company's store. Westbrooks is alledged to have had a knife and when Jackson
saw the weapon, he said he thought Westbrooks, in view of alledged threats, was
going to attack him and he shot him. There were no eye witnesses to the actual
killing.
The taking of testimony was
completed Thursday and arguments in this case were made yesterday, the case
going to the jury about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. J. N. Birch, of Macon, and
official of the mmill where the two men were employed attended the trial and
assisted in the defense of Jackson.
The State was represented by Solicitor
Doyle Campbell and Williamgham and Willingham of Forsyth,, while
Judge F. Holmes Johnson and Joe Ben Jackson appeared for the
defense.
May 14, 1923
Macon Telegraph
HELD AS KILLER. Negro Is Charged With Having
Slain Wife at Gray, Ga.
Gray, Ga, May 123 - Following the discovery of
his wife's body (Leah Hill Miller) , with her head crushed in, Andrew
Miller, 30-year-old negro, was taken into custody today by Sheriff
Middlebrooks on the charge of murder.
Miller claimed his wife committed
suicide. the sheriff declared that it would be impossible for any person to
inflict such injuries upon one's self.
The body was found in bed Friday
morning and the coroner's jury found a verdict of murder.
Her chin and lower jar were severely
bruised and there were finger prints on her shoulder. She had been placed in a
partly sitting posture and her hand cupped with a pistol in it but the hammer
was not on the empty shell. The pistol was placed in her left hand. Witnesses
who were questioned said she was not left handed. When the body was examined,
there could not be found a bullet wound.
One of the children said he heard a shot
fired about 2 o'clock Friday morning.
July 9, 1923
Macon Telegraph
NEGRO PLANTATION HAND SLAIN IN JONES COUNTY. Sam
Childs Killed at James Station by Another Black Who Has No Been Caught.
Gray, Ga., July 8 - Sam
Childs, 40, negro farm laborer, was shot and killed this morning about 10
o'clock at James Station, near here, by Willie Gray, another negro about
the same age. The negroes are said to have been drinking and gambling. Gray had
not been caught early tonight.
According to witnesses, Childs was
also armed, and Gray got the drop on the dead negro, the bullet killing him
almost instantly.
Gray is employed at a sawmill at
James Station. He is also accused of having shot another negro shortly after
Christmas.
November 20, 1923
Macon Telegraph
ONE MAN KILLED IN KNIFE BATTLE. Another Wounded.
Expected to Die, in Jones County. PERRY MOORE
IS DEAD. Tom Smallwood Is Held at Gray Accused of Murder.
Gray, Ga., Nov. 19 - Tom Smallwood, white lumberman, is held in the Jones
County jail charged with murder following a cutting afray today near
Griswoldville, in Jones County, in which one man was fatally injured, and
another possibly so. Sheriff Middlebrooks announced tonight.
Perry Moore, white, is dead
of his wounds, the sheriff says he has learn, and Sam
Young in seriously injured, and may die before tomorrow morning.
The three men, who are all lumber
men, engaged in an argument over lumber, said Sheriff Middlebrooks, who
explained that Moore attacked Young with a kife, wounding him, and that
Smallwood then rushed upon Moore, cutting him fatally. The sheriff went to
Griswoldville and arrested Smallwood.
(Note: Sam Young, age 67, died Nov. 29,
1923)
October 23, 1924
Macon Telegaph
NEGRO IS FOUND GUILTY OF TAKING
WIFE'S LIFE. No Recommendation in Verdict of Jury in Jones County Against
Alex Williams
Gray, Ga, Oct. 22 - Alex Williams,
a young negro, was found guilty of murder yesterday by the Jones County Superior
Court. The jury returned the verdict without recommendation. Sentence has not
yet been passed. Williams was charged with killing his wife, her burned body
having been found in the ruins of their cabin home and the two small children of
the couple were asleep on their father's overcoat in a nearby crib.
The negro was arrested in Pittsbugh, Pa.,
when he stepped off of a train. An officer of Jones County brought him back to
Georgia without requisition papers required.
April 30, 1925
Augusta Chronicle
MAN TRANSFERRED TO MACON PRISON. John
Bachelor, Held For Murder of Mother-in-Law at Griswoldville Removed For Safe
Keeping.
Macon, Ga, April 29 - John Bachelor held
for the murder of his mother-in-law, Mrs. Will T. Anderson, in
Griswoldville, Ga., yesterday, was brought to Bibb county jail in Macon for
safekeeping from Gray at 11 o'clock tonight.
Sheriff J. C. Middlebrook, of Jones
county, who attended the prisoner, said feeling ran so high in and around
Griswoldville and Jones county that he thought it advisable to remove Bachelor
to Bibb county.
Funeral of Mrs. Anderson was held at
4 o'clock this afternoon from the Mountain Springs church, near her home, and
was largely attended.
On the road to Macon Bachelor
remained silent and did not mention the shooting. He has consistently refused to
discuss it with officers.
Having been separated from his wife
seeking employment for some time, Bachelor went to the Anderson home Tuesday
morning, where Mrs. Bachelor and their two children were staying, armed with a
revolver. He was said to have been intoxicated at the time. An altercation and
the shooting followed. Bachelor fired the shots, Mrs. Bachelor stated while she
grappled with him with the revolver in his hand.
November 24, 1925
Augusta Chronicle
Georgia Man Denied New Trial by Judge J. B. Parks
at Gray.
Gray, Ga., Nov. 23 - John D. Bachelor,
43, under sentence of death following his conviction on the charge of killing
his mother-in-law, was tonight denied a new trial by Judge James B. Parks, after
hearing arguments on the appeal.
Batchelor, a resident of Atlanta, but a
native of Haddock, was convicted of the crime last month and sentenced to die in
the electric chair on November 27.,
Attorneys for the defense filed, notice of
an appeal to the supreme court, which automatically delays the execution.
Mrs. Fannie Anderson, aged
mother-in-law of the condemned man, was slain on April 28, last, on the front
porch of her farm home at Haddock. The testimony of Batchelor's nine-year-old
daughter, never shaken in the slightest detail, was that her father came to the
Anderson home in a very angry frame of mind, shot down the aged woman at close
range, and then, with his wife struggling to take away the gun, fired another
shot into the prostrate body of the aged woman, over the daughter's shoulder.
August 29, 1925
Augusta Chronicle
2 COUNTY OFFICERS SHOT AND KILLED NEAR ILLICIT
STILL. Haddock, Ga., Aug. 28. The bodies of Floyd
Malone, county policeman, and of
Frank Tucker, his deputy, were found near the old Choates mill, five miles
from here this afternoon. They had been shot this afternoon supposedly by
moonshiners.
There was nothing at the scene to indicate
that there had been a scuffle. On the contrary the evidence uncovered by
Sheriff J. Clark Middlebrooks tonight indicates that both men were shot and
killed at a distillery site in the lower part of Jones county, both bodies being
placed in the county policeman's automobile and carried to the old mill site.
Malone's body had been carefully laid out
on the ground, on top of his Winchester rifle while his pistol laid a few inches
ahead of him.
Tucker's body lay across his pump shotgun,
with an automatic pistol also carefully placed a few inches above his head.
There was not blood on the ground and
little blood in Malone's automobile, in which the bodies had been transported to
the mill site.
The officers left here at 4
o'clock this morning on a hunt for moonshiners in the southeastern part of the
county. Searching parties went out to try to located them, but a boy who had
been fishing in Choate's mill pond observed the abandoned car some
distance from the Macon-Garrison road, investigated and came upon the bodies. He
immediately gave the alarm and the sheriff and a large posse of men hastened
here from Gray, the county seat.
Malone is married and hails from
Jasper county. He had been here in Jones county only two weeks, succeeding
Joe S. Grubb, the county policeman who was killed about a month ago and
who also came from Monticello, Ga.
Sheriff Middlebrooks said tonight, after
an examination of the bodies that both had been shot at close range by a shotgun
in which "rung" or cut shells had been used. One of the cut shells was found at
the scene.
Great holes were torn in the bodies of
both men, not only the charge but nearly half of the shell passing into the
bodies in each instance, producing almost instant death.
Malone was shot below the right
shoulder, the charged entering his chest and side.
Tucker was shot in the head.
Sheriff Middlebrooks expressed
the opinion that he found the motive for the killing in the tenneau of the
automobile, a distillery cap. He said that the raiding officers undoubtedly had
come upon a still in the late afternoon, taken the cap and then returned later
to the scene of the distillery in the hope of capturing the operators when they
showed up for the night's run.
Coroner J. R. Bullington is in the
Middle Georgia sanitorium in Macon, suffering from illness. However,
arrangements are being made to hold an inquest.
Persons attempted to track the
automobile back to the scene of the killing tonight, but because of darkness
they had to give up the job until daylight.
The sheriff stated that Malone's weapon
had not been discharged. Two shot had been fired from Tucker's pistol.
Gray, Ga., Aug. 28. E. T. Dumas was
sworn in as coroner to investigate the killing of Floyd Malone, county
policeman, and his deputy, Frank Tucker, tonight. The jury returned a verdict
that the men came to their deaths from unknown parties and that it was murder.
Feeling is running high here
tonight. Citizens are planning a mass meeting for the purpose, it was announced,
of running all moonshiners out of the county.
The governor has been appealed
to offer rewards in addition to Jones county rewards, for the capture of the
slayers of the two officers.
September 1, 1925
Augusta Chronicle
~excerpt~ Those under arrest in the Bibb county
jail at Macon are:
R. E. Etheridge, 38, married. Grover
Cleveland Etheridge, 48, married. Atkinson Etheridge, 29, married.
T. A. Stubbs, 45, married. Otis Stubbs, 16, son of T. A.
Stubbs. Mitchell Moore, 31 married. All of these are white men. Two negroes
previously arrested are being held as material witnesses. One of the negroes is
said to have been employed by Atkinson Etheridge......
People here in Gray do not like to be
linked up with the case at all. They declared today that there was only a little
section of the county, more that ten miles away from this city, which could be
called "bad lands."
New information that came to the surface
today strengthens the theory of some people that the slain officers were lured
into the death trap and that they did not ever reach the still where they were
supposed to have been going..
Homer Green, one of the negroes who had
been held in the Jones county jail since Sunday in connection with the slaying
of two Jones county policemen, was transferred to the Bibb county jail tonight
by Sheriff Middlebrooks of Jones, county, and formally charged with murder.
September 5, 1925
Augusta Chronicle
Macon, Ga., Sept. 4. Federal prohibition
enforcement officers combing the territory around Commissioner creek, in Jones
county, this afternoon, found a still near the rear of the home of
R. E. Etheridge, one of the men under arrest in connection with the
killing of Floyd Malone, county policeman and Deputy Frank Tucker.
The still had not been
operated for several days, the officers stated. The water was being supplied
from a pool in the creek, below which a dam had been built.
This is the sixth still destroyed in this
neighborhood since the double murder......
September 7, 1925
Augusta Chronicle
~excerpt~ The sheriff's office announced tonight
that W. A. (Frog Eye) Johnson, wanted in Jones county on a warrant
charging murder in connection with the slaying of County Policeman Floyd Malone
and Deputy Frank Tucker, nine days ago, is under arrest in Miami, Fla.
December 30, 1925
Macon Telegraph
FARMER IS FREED IN KILLING CASE. Murder of
J. L. Gordon By C. L. Callahan Held Justifiable. IS RESULT OF AN ARGUMENT
Gray, Ga., Dec. 29 - Following a
coroner's inquest today investigating the shooting last night of J.
L. Gordon, 45, sawmill man, living in the western part of Jones County,
C. L. Callahan, 34, slayer of Gordon was exonerated of all blame. The
jury considered his act justifiable homicide.
According to evidence brought out at the
inquest held at Gray, Gordon and his wife had gone to visit the Callahan home
and take supper with them. During the meal Gordon and Callahan engaged in an
argument, the result of which was that Gordon tried to strike Callahan with a
chair. Callahan struck Gordon knocking him to the floor.
Gordon and his wife returned to
their home and Gordon put on his hunting coat, with a number of gun shells in
the pockets, and took his gun to the home of Callahan, which was about a mile
distant.
Mrs. Callahan saw Gordon approaching and
before her husband could act, rushed to the back door to prevent his coming into
the house.
Andrew Jackson, a neighbor,
visiting with the Callahans, went to the assistance of Mrs. Callahan. She pushed
Gordon into the yard and struggle with him for the possession of the shotgun.
Gordon shoved Mrs. Callahan away from him,
eluded Jackson and rushed for the back door of the Callahan residence. It
was then that Callahan fired on him with a shot gun, killing him almost
instantly. All this was according to testimony at the inquest.
Mrs. Gordon testified at the inquest
that she tried to keep her husband from going back to the Callahan home, but
that he kept repeating that he would tolerate no such treatment as he had
received from Callahan.
May 5, 1926
Augusta Chronicle
~excerpt~The Etheridge brothers are under
sentence of life imprisonment for the murder..Atkinson Etheridge
having been tried only a few weeks ago.
October 18, 1926
Macon Telegraph
NEGRO KILLED. Will Andrews Dies After Shooting in
Jones County. Will Andrews,
negro, died at a local hospital yesterday afternoon of bullet wounds suffered in
a shooting affray in Jones County early Sunday morning. Authorities are seeking
Gilbert Burgess, negro, who is supposed to have fired the fatal shot.
May 17, 1939
Macon Telegraph
Jones Coroner Believes Woman Lived in Macon. Body
Is That of White Person About 30 Years Old, Etheridge Says.
New clues uncovered yesterday in the
Jones county lovers-lane skeleton murder mystery have convinced
Coroner W. H. Etheridge that the victim was a blonde white woman in her
early thirties, the coroner reported to The Telegraph last night.
Mr. Etheridge reported his further
belief that the dead woman was a resident of Macon.
The new evidence consisted of
a few wisps of blonde hair, discovered in the much of the Griswoldville swamp
near where the skull of the lay, the bones of a left hand; hitherto missing, and
a scrap of human flesh, decomposing in the mud where the gruesome discovery was
made.
Coroner Etheridge turned up the new
evidence yesterday afternoon, ash he combed the area in the company of Joel
Etheridge and Bob Stripling, Jones county farmers who first
discovered the skeleton last Wednesday afternoon. He reported that the jaw and
both feet are still missing.
To Continue Search. The unreported members were
either washed away by spring freshets or carried away by animals, the coroner
believes, but the intends to continue his search until all possibility of
further disclosures is exhausted.
"I have checked every missing person
in Jones county," Mr. Etheridge report last nighr, "and I have come to the
conclusion that the victim was a resident of Macon."
He and Mrs. W. E. McCord,
woman criminal investigator of the Macon police department, previously had
agreed that the slayer, if one is involved, was a native of the region in which
the body was found. They based that conclusion on the difficulty of reaching the
hidden spot where the body lay.
Mrs. McCord, who had planned to
return to the area yesterday, was not able to make the trip, she said last
night. She plans, however, to continue the investigation today.
Mrs. McCord became interested in the
case when reports were circulated that the victim was Mrs. Pauline Morgan
Bullington, former Macon woman. This rumor was exploded when Mrs. Bullington
was found to be alive and working in Atlanta.
The coroner last night described the
secluded territory where the body was found as a rendezvous for lovers. A
little-used road leads to an abandoned sawmill about 100 yards from the body's
location, and Mr. Etheridge reported that the road is well-known as a place to
park.
August 22, 1941
Macon Telegraph
Gray, Aug 21. Sheriff J. P. Hawkins
said Thursday night a man docketed as Tom Gip Alexander, 35, of Jasper
county, was being held in Jones county jail here on a warrant charging murder in
the shotgun, tourist camp slaying of Charlie Dover, 33-year old Negro last
Saturday night.
The officer said that he and Sheriff
Frank Ezell of Jasper county, arrested Alexander while the latter was
operating a tractor on a post road project, about 10 miles north of Monticello
Thursday.
Sheriff Hawkins said he could not discuss
the naure of the evidence upon which the warrant, signed by a deputy, had been
issued, but commented:
"We've got a good case."
Dover was slain with a shotgun blast in
the face at Dixie Cabins, where he worked, on the Macon highway near here.
Statements gained from Sammy Ford, 21-year-old Negro who had been held as
a material witness, had indicated a white man was involved, Sheriff Hawkins
said.
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