Extracted
from Proctor Neal Carter’s “Lynch-Law and the Press of
Missouri”, M.A. Thesis, University of Missouri –
Columbia, 1933, pp.29 – 35.
“…
The lynching of Abraham Witherup at Paris, in 1902 occurred
after Witherup had confessed to the murder of Will Grow.
Grow’s body was found floating in a small stream near
Paris, April 23, 1902. Abraham Witherup was arrested and
confessed to the murder April 25. He was in jail at Paris
until his arraignment a month later. The day following his
arraignment, Witherup was taken from the jail and lynched by
a mob.
In the two stories that appeared in the Paris Mercury
prior to the lynching of Witherup, mention was made of the
similarity of his crime, to a crime for which Alexander
Jester was tried and acquitted a year previous. In the story
quoted below, the Paris Mercury (Paris Mercury, Jun
6, 1902) says: “There is about him (Witherup) a certain
though indefinable suggestion of Alexander Jester, to whose
crime his own bears such a striking similarity. There is the
same ignorant cunning, the same feigned impassiveness, the
same animal glitter in the watery blue eye, though he is by
no means Jester’s equal in intellectuality.”
It is also brought out in this story that “Witherup was
suspicioned of murdering a boy near Medicine Lodge, Kansas,
under almost identical circumstances, the two having cropped
together.” After the lynching of Witherup, the Centralia
Courier was quoted in the Paris Mercury as
follows: “The mob that hung Witherup at Paris, Mo., Sunday
morning was doubtless incited to the lawless deed by the
acquittal of old man Jester at New London last year.” The
first story appearing in the Paris Mercury (Paris Mercury,
April 25, 1902) recounted Witherup’s confession and
details of the murder.
Thursday noon – Witherup made a detailed confession to
Prosecuting Attorney McAllister at the jail this morning.
The crime, he says, was committed in a quarrel over rent, in
the manner described. He killed Grow with a hatchet, which
he threw into the river with the body. This is a story of
murder – the most revolting, gruesome and ghastly murder
that has ever taken place in the history of Monroe county.
Late Tuesday afternoon Gene Crow and E.J. Cullifer, living
northeast of Old Clinton, went down to North Fork, near
Paint Bank to fish. They saw something floating almost on
the surface of the water in the middle of the stream and on
investigating closer found it was a human body. It was lying
face downward and the hair on the back of the head was
showing. Assistance was summoned by the two men and the body
taken from the water. It was in a badly decomposed state
with a number of terrific gashes about the head. Friends
recognized it as the body of Will Grow, a young man farming
in that vicinity and word was sent to Prosecuting Attorney
McAllister at Paris. Directing them to hold the body at the
river’s edge until he came, Mr. McAllister notified Dr.
Johnson, coroner, at Madison, and the two officers,
accompanied by Deputy Sheriff Martin Clark, Clarence Evans
and Dr. Bodine as a surgical expert, went to the scene early
Wednesday morning.
In the absence of Dr. Johnson the inquest was held by Squire
Martin. Whitecotton refuses to defend Witherup. In a little
shed on the river bank in the presence of some 50 or 75 men
of the vicinity, the inquest was held and the body dressed
for burial by the distressed father and brother of the young
man, who live just east of Paris. The verdict of the
coroner’s jury was that Grow came to his death by a weapon
wielded in the hands of Abraham Witherup, and this is the
story.
Abraham Witherup is a man about 55, and had been cropping
with young Grow since February on 60 acres of land near
Hunnewell belonging to Mrs. Henry Johnson. The two men had
lived together in a house about a quarter of a mile back
from the road. Little attention had been paid to them. What
cause of motive existed for the murder is not apparent at
this time, but later developments may bring it out. From
evidence gathered by the officers at the inquest it is
evident that murder has been committed, that it is foul and
brutal as such crimes ever are, and that Witherup is the
guilty man. On Grow’s head were seven gashes, any one of
which, says Dr. Bodine, would have been fatal. The attempt
made to conceal his act shown the over-cunning with which
guilt very frequently betrays itself. Grow was murdered in
the house where the two men lived last Thursday night. He
was evidently sitting in a rocking chair and Witherup either
in a fit of rage or with premeditated plan, beat him to
death with some blunt instrument. The floor was covered with
blood, the wall was spattered with it, and a broom the
murderer had used to clean up the ghastly evidence against
him, was smeared with it. In the night he hitched up a road
wagon, loaded his bleeding victim in it and drove to the
river where he deposited the body, never thinking to weight
it down. The distance to the nearest point of the river was
3 miles, but he returned by a different route. Neighbors
heard the wagon rumbling over the roads during the night,
but none guessed its gruesome mission. The man drove down
among the lonely hill of North Fork undisturbed. Next day he
went to Hunnewell and bought some red paint, with a sort of
ignorant cunning using it to paint over the floor in order
to hide way up and scraped and washed the paper on the walls
to the plastering, but the damned spot would not out. He
chiseled the bottom of his wagon bed where the body had lain
and bled and again betrayed himself. Surely no man ever had
so much blood.
It ran under the floor, soaked the soil and stained the
rocks to cry out against him. A portion of the floor was
taken up and is in possession of the authorities. The blood
beneath was still damp. The instrument with which the deed
was committed is thought to have been thrown in the river
and is being searched for, the well having been examined
Wednesday. Tuesday Witherup came to the home of the boy’s
parents east of Paris and told them the boy was missing. He
was eating dinner with the family when arrested, a dinner
cooked by the mother of the boy he murdered. He feigned
surprise, but when examined at the jail was found to be
reeking evidence of the foul crime. His drawers were bloody,
his watch bloody, and a big dirk knife stained. He was
arrested by Sheriff Clark and Marshal Masterson on receipt
of telephone message from Clinton.
A Mercury reporter visited Witherup at the jail
Wednesday evening. He is a tall, raw-boned man with short
stubby blond beard of recent growth and weighs about 180
pounds. This first and final impression of a visitor, is
that man is vicious by nature, a criminal from instinct,
ferocious, brutal and unforgiving. His conduct is nervous,
his face furtive and his light blue eye evasive and
restless. There is about him a certain though indefinable
suggestion of Alexander Jester, to whose crime his own bears
such a striking similarity. There is the same ignorant
cunning, the same feigned impassiveness, the same animal
glitter the watery blue eye, though he is by no means
Jester’s equal in intellectuality. In reply to questions
that had any bearing on the case his answers were evasive,
“I am a prisoner and don’t like to talk,” was the
invariable response. Once only did he appear disconcerted
and that was when the reporter asked in reverting to the
crime: “So there was no bad blood between you and Grow?
You had no possible motive for murdering him?” “I
don’t know about that,” he replied quickly and
unguardedly, but realizing his indiscretion, stopped short
in dogged silence. When told about the pint and the chiseled
wagon bed he betrayed no concern. He said the wagon had been
chiseled since he left it if the report was true. Witherup
is a study for criminologists and if reports be true has a
record which shows the ferocious and bloody bent of his
mind. He came here from Kansas and like his famous prototype
Jester, is a pensioner and has been oft married. Like him
also he displays the same cruelty toward animals and has the
same ungovernable temper. Sexuality and cruelty are the
predominant symptoms marked in the face and oblong head of
both men. It has been known to the local authorities for
several years that Witherup was suspicioned of murdering a
boy near Medicine Lodge, Kansas, and almost identical
circumstances, the two having cropped together. The evidence
was never sufficient to demand his requisition, but his
second wife, Mrs. Miller, who secured a divorce from him
about a year ago, told Sheriff Clark that he had confessed
to her. She also said he would go into insane rages at his
horses and come for his gun to kill them. He is evidently a
pervert with a diseased and ferocious desire to shed
blood.”
The second and final story before the lynching took place,
appeared is the Mercury, Mary 2nd. It
pointed out further evidences of the ‘mental and moral’
kinship of Witherup to Alexander Jester. This story also
mentioned that there was talk of mob action and expressed
the hope that ‘such talk be given up.’ “Abraham
Witherup, charged with the murder of William Grow, is
showing additional signs of his mental and moral kinship to
Alexander jester. He has fallen back on religion as a stay
and is depending on the occult for comfort. By his request
Rev. W.N. Briney of the Paris Christian Church has visited
him three times during the past week. On the first visit he
seemed reserved and would talk only on religious matters,
his purpose seeming to be a desire to find out what was
going to be done with him. On the third visit he broke down,
asked Rev. Briney to pray with him, and made a second
confession, which in substance, is the same as that made
Prosecuting Attorney McAllister.
He said that he was born in Ohio, that neither he nor his
father were church members and that he himself had never
been religiously inclined. He said he killed Grow Thursday
night and that the quarrel leading up to the crime occurred
that morning. The two men had had an altercation over
feeding the horses and Witherup, becoming indignant, had
called Grow a liar, accusing him of dealing unfairly with
him in regard to the note and contracts made when they
rented the place. Nothing more was said during the day and
that night Grow dressed up to go on a visit home. Witherup
was in bed. Grow reproached him with still being ‘sore’
over the morning’s occurrence and Witherup said he was,
referring to having given his companion the lie and saying,
‘I still stick to it.’ At this Grow became angry, saying
the repetition of the charge was more than he would stand.
He picked up the now famous bloody rocking chair and made at
Witherup, who now had arisen from the bed. According to the
accused man’s testimony a struggle ensued. The two men
alone in the cabin and far removed from the hearing of sight
of the world, fought like cage beasts for life and death. He
says Grow stuck him twice with the chair, breaking off the
rocker, as noted by the officers on investigation. In his
extremity Witherup says he grabbed a hatchet from the table
and struck Grow on the head, felling him. After this, being
in a rage, he pounded the prostrate man on the head until he
came to a realization of his crime and found he had murdered
him. In two hours he loading the bleeding body in a wagon,
and desiring to conceal his crime, hauled it to the river
three miles away, throwing it in. Next day he painted the
floor, the rocker, the bloody broom used in sweeping up the
blood and tried to wash the blood spots from the wall. He
felt no fear or remorse in staying on his victim’s mother
and father. In confirmation of this story, Witherup’s
drawers were bloody showing he had made the struggle in his
night clothes, and he had two bruises, one of the leg and
the other on the shoulder where he said Grow had struck him
with the chair. The chair also had a rocker broken off. In
refutation of it, Grow had no bruises about the arms or
chest, such as, Dr. Bodine says, would naturally have
resulted in a struggle of the kind described, but was
evidently struck first in the back of the head—a fatal
fracture—a fact almost impossible if Grow had had the cair
as a guard. Grow’s father says the two men had had trouble
some weeks ago in which Witherup threatened his son with the
same chair. The trouble arose because Grow, who was doing
the cooking, had put too much salt in the beans, and
Witherup had gotten mad.
The prosecution is inclined to the theory, it is said but
not known, that Witherup murdered Grow while the latter was
in bed, striking him on the back of the head first and then
beating him to death. This accounts for the blood on the
drawers worn by Witherup when arrested. The hatchet, tied in
a sack, was found by Witherup’s direction, in the river
last Friday. When Rev. Briney asked him if he would do the
same thing over again under similar circumstances, he
replied no and weeping said he would allow the boy to beat
him to death…” |