Murder & Mayhem in Central Massachusetts
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About this ebook
Rachel Faugno
Rachel Faugno is a writer and English instructor at Quinsigamond Community College in Worcester, Massachusetts.
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Reviews for Murder & Mayhem in Central Massachusetts
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5So many axe murders! Definitely of local interest; wished there was more detail about all of the cases discussed.
Book preview
Murder & Mayhem in Central Massachusetts - Rachel Faugno
all.
INTRODUCTION
With its rolling hills, meandering waterways and sparkling ponds set amid lush and verdant woodlands, Worcester County in central Massachusetts presents a bucolic image. It’s hard to imagine that anything truly awful has ever marred the seeming serenity of the sleepy old towns and historic city that occupy this pleasant landscape.
Yet from its earliest days as a colonial settlement right up to the present time, Worcester and its surrounding communities have been the scene of many violent and grisly crimes. Worcester itself was beset by violence from the start. The area was originally inhabited by members of the Nipmuc tribe, who called the region with its long, narrow pond Quinsigamond,
which means pickerel fishing place.
English settlers staked their claim to eight square miles of the land in 1674, but the settlement was burned to the ground on December 2, 1675, during King Philip’s War, a bloody conflict between Native Americans and English colonists that engulfed much of New England.
A second attempt at settlement was made in 1684, but the town was abandoned in 1702 during Queen Anne’s War when Native Americans again tried to reclaim their ancestral lands. When farmer Digory Sargent and his family refused to leave, he and his wife were slain.
Settlers claimed the land for a third time in 1713, changing the name Quinsigamond
to Worcester,
after the city of Worcester, England. The town became the county seat of the newly founded Worcester County in 1731, and the citizens erected their first courthouse in 1733. Eight years later, they witnessed the county’s first murder trial.
This map, published by Isaiah Thomas, shows Worcester County not long after it was established in 1731. American Antiquarian Society.
The murder occurred in Brookfield on September 29, 1741, during a husking bee on the farm of John Green, located midway on the present road from North Brookfield to West Brookfield. Green’s son, Jabez, grew quarrelsome, boasting that he was ready to fight anyone and everyone who was present. In the ensuing excitement, he stabbed Thomas McCluer, who died of his wounds the following day. Green was arrested and conveyed to the Worcester jail, where he was held until the next term of the Superior Court of Judicature, Court of Assize and General Jail Delivery, in Worcester, on September 21, 1742. Twenty-three witnesses were examined, and the jury found him guilty. On October 21, 1742, Jabez Green was hanged for his crime.
Executions were public events in Worcester’s early days, attracting huge crowds and creating a carnival-like atmosphere. The hanging of Samuel Frost on November 5, 1793, was said to have drawn two thousand spectators. Frost had been tried for murdering his father in April 1784 but was acquitted on the grounds of insanity. Records don’t show whether he spent any time in confinement, but on July 16, 1793, he murdered his employer, Captain Elisha Allen of Princeton, during an argument in a field on Allen’s farm. Frost struck him more than fifteen times with the blade of a hoe and left his body lying on the ground. This time there was no acquittal. At the trial, he was found sane and sentenced to death.
Not everyone who was hanged in Worcester was convicted of murder. In fact, the first person to be formally executed in Worcester County was Hugh Henderson, who was hanged for the crime of burglary in 1737. Four other convicted thieves would follow. In all, seventeen men and one woman died on the gallows in Worcester. The last was Samuel J. Frost of Petersham, who murdered his brother-in-law, Frank P. Towne. The execution took place in the Summer Street jail on May 25, 1876. When the drop fell, Frost’s head was nearly severed, and many of the witnesses fainted. After that, execution became a function of the state.
In cases where the death penalty wasn’t applied, other penalties were meted out. One popular punishment was to sentence a wrongdoer to sit for hours on the gallows with a noose around his neck before being hauled off to jail. Other offenders might be sent to the pillory or whipping post, have their forehead branded or an ear cropped or be sold into bondage.
Early records show that Caleb Jephterson was sentenced to the pillory for an hour and a half for the odious and detestable crime of blasphemy.
Another man, James Trask, was convicted of fraud and sent to the pillory for one hour, whipped thirty stripes
and then, because he was unable to pay a substantial fine, sold into bondage for four years.
In 1790, Revolutionary War hero Colonel Timothy Bigelow was thrown into the old stone jail on Lincoln Street in Worcester for nonpayment of a debt. The jailer’s well-worn ledger reads, Colonel Timothy Bigelow: Committed February 15—Discharged by Death April 1, 1790.
Colonel Bigelow’s fate is a reminder that life in the good old days
was often hard and justice harsh. Although it is tempting to regard the past nostalgically— to imagine a simpler time when people were happier, kinder or more good hearted than they are today—dishonesty, conflict and violence have always been with us. Our definition of crime and methods of punishment change with the times. The scales of justice tilt alternately toward severity or leniency.
A poem and Dying Warning
publicized the hanging of Hugh Henderson for burglary in 1737. He was the first person formally executed in Worcester County. American Antiquarian Society.
But human nature doesn’t change. The men and women whose stories are told on the following pages are proof of that. From the escaped slave who was hanged for rape in 1768 to the Sutton choir singer who was convicted of drowning his wife in 1935, all were motivated by the same fearsome impulses that lie behind most of today’s violent crimes: lust, greed, rage, hate, fear, despair or madness—or the unlocked secrets of the human heart.
CHAPTER 1
FROM SLAVERY TO THE GALLOWS
As he sat in the Worcester jail awaiting execution in October 1768, escaped slave Arthur Toby produced a vivid account of his crime-filled life.
I would solemnly warn those of my Color, as they regard their own souls, to avoid Desertion from their Masters, Drunkenness and Lewdness; which three Crimes was the Source from which have flowed the many Evils and Miseries of my short Life. Short indeed!
So declared twenty-one-year-old Arthur Toby in his dying speech
from the Worcester jail on October 18, 1768—two days before he was hanged for a rape committed on the body of one Deborah Metcalfe.
The execution was the final act of a crime-filled life in which Arthur gained notoriety as one of colonial New England’s most incorrigible miscreants.
His firsthand account, which was printed in Boston and sold to an eager audience, paints a complex picture of daily life in Massachusetts before the Revolution. In Arthur’s world, slaves were bought and sold, Native Americans lived in separate settlements, farming was the primary occupation, whaling was a thriving industry, taverns and inns were common gathering places, husking bees were important social events…and justice was swift.
BORN A SLAVE
Arthur Toby entered the world as the child of a slave in the household of Richard Godfrey, Esq., of Taunton, Massachusetts, on January 15, 1747. He was taught to read and write and, in his own words, was treated very kindly by my Master.
But he was often in conflict with Mrs. Godfrey, and at the age of fourteen he ran away. This, he says, was the beginning of my many notorious Crimes, of which I have been guilty.
He headed for Sandwich, a Cape Cod town about forty miles away. There, he confesses, he spent his time in Drunkenness and Fornication; for which crimes I have been since famous.
After stealing a shirt and paying restitution of twenty schillings, and concerned that his Character being now known,
he decided to ship out on a whaling sloop with Captain Coffin of Nantucket. (The Coffins were a prominent whaling family for almost two hundred years.)
Eight months at sea did little to reform Arthur’s behavior. When he returned to Nantucket, he embarked on a six-week crime spree. At one point, he broke into a store and stole rum, a pair of trousers, a jacket and some calico. He was drunk the next day, and by wearing the Jacket, was detected, for which Offence I was whip’d with fifteen Stripes, and committed to Gaol, for the Payment of Cost.
He escaped a half hour later by breaking the lock.
After another burglary, he attempted to escape on a ship but was discovered, taken on shore and whipped sixteen Stripes.
He was set free and returned to Taunton, where my Master received me kindly, whom I served three Years.
During that time, he followed the Seas,
sailing from Nantucket and Newport to the West Indies, where I whored and drank, to great Excess.
In October 1764, he again returned to live with my Master in Taunton, where I behaved well for six Weeks.
But he was soon in trouble again. One day while intoxicated, he entered a house where were several Women only
and offered Indecencies
to them. He was discovered by James Williams, Esq., who with the assistance of Job Smith placed him in the Taunton jail. The next day, he was tried before the same Mr. Williams and whipped "thirtynine Stripes for abusing