No one knew better
the
gruesome tales of the hangings at Gladeville than the
late Charles
Renfro,
whom the writer interviewed.
Charles Renfro
said:
"When I was made a member of the Wise
County
Vigilantes back there in 1892, I little dreamed that I
was to become
the
scaffold maker or noose knot tier for all the six men
who were to die
on
the gallows in my country. But it was that way.
The Vigilantes had
been
organized in Big Stone Gap, Virginia by Josh Bullitt
as a protection
against
the bad men of the hills when the first coal boom
came. John Fox, Jr.,
the author of the Trail of the Lonesome Pine, was a
member of the
guard,
I recollect.
The Hanging of
Talt Hall
And when it
was
norated* around that the desperado Talt Hall, a native
Kentuckian, who
had been committing crime on the Virginia side of the
line for some
time,
had been jailed for the wanton killing of Enos Hylton,
Chief of Police
of Norton, and that his buddies in Kentucky were going
to storm the
jail
and remove him, the volunteer county guard was
increased to more than
one
hundred members.
Josh Bullitt came up
from
Big Stone Gap and drilled us fellows at the county
seat every day. A
part
would stand guard while the others were drilling. I
was made a member
of
the guard although I was then in my teens.
Talt Hall was tried
and
sentenced to hang by the neck until he was dead. Then
it was that a
message
came from Kentucky to the effect that some of Talt's
friends intended
to
storm the jail and take him out.
The old jail was
none
too secure and the judge ordered that Hall be taken to
Lynchburg for
safe
keeping while the higher courts were examining the
motion for a retrial
on the grounds of a writ of error.
But the higher
courts
sustained the county court and Hall was sent back to
be hanged. His
execution
date was fixed to be September 2, 1892.
And what a day in
the
county seat town of Gladeville that was! In order to
get the full color
the occasion afforded, we herewith leave the narrative
of jailer Renfro
and switch to an account by John Fox, Jr. in his book
"Bluegrass and
Rhododendron",
page 239.
Fox wrote: "Through
mountain
and Valley, humanity had talked of nothing else for
weeks, and before
dawn
of the fatal day, humanity started in converging lines
from all other
counties
for the county seat of Wise - from Scott and from Lee;
from wild
Dickenson
and Buchanan, where one may find white men who have
never looked upon a
white man's face; from the Pound which harbors the
desperadoes of two
sister
states whose skirts are there stitched together with
pine and pin-oak
along
the crest of the Cumberland; and, further on, even
from the faraway
Kentucky
hills, mountain humanity had started at dawn of the
day before. A
stranger
would have thought that a county fair, a camp meeting,
or a circus was
the goal. Men and women, boys and girls, children and
babes in arms;
each
in his Sunday best - the men in jeans, slouch hats and
high boots; the
women in gay ribbons and brilliant homespun; in wagons
and on foot, on
horses and mules, carrying man and man, man and boy,
lover and
sweetheart,
or husband and wife and child - all moved through the
crisp September
air,
past woods of russet and crimson and along brown dirt
roads to a little
straggling mountain town where midway of the one long
street and shut
in
by a tall board fence was a courthouse, with the front
door closed and
barred, and port holes cut through its brick walls and
looking to the
rear;
and in the rear a jail; and to one side of the jail a
tall wooden box
with
a projecting cross beam in full sight, from the center
of which a rope
swung to and fro, when the wind moved.
Never had a criminal
met
death at the hands of the law in that region, and it
was not sure that
the law was going to take its course now, for the
condemned man was a
Kentucky
feudsman, and his clan was there to rescue him from
the gallows, and
some
of his enemies were on hand to see that he died a just
death by a
bullet,
if he should escape the noose. And the guard, whose
grim dream of law
and
order seemed to be coming true, was there from the
Gap, twenty miles
away,
to see that the noose did its ordained work.
On the
outskirts
of town, and along every road, boyish policemen were
halting and
disarming
every man who carried a weapon in sight. At the back
window of the
courthouse
and at the threatening little port holes were more
youngsters manning
Winchesters.
At the windows of the jailer's house, which was of
frame and which
joined
and fronted the jail, were more still, on guard, and
around the jail
was
a line of them, heavily armed to keep the crowd back
on the other side
of the jail yard fence.
The crowd had been
waiting
for hours. The neighboring hills were blocked with
people waiting. The
house tops were blocked with men and boys, waiting.
Now the fatal noon
was
hardly an hour away, and a big man with a red face
appeared at one of
the
jailer's windows; and then the sheriff, who began to
take out a sash.
At
once a hush came over the crowd and then a rustling
and a murmur. It
was
the prisoner's lawyer and something was going to
happen. Faces and gun
muzzles thickened at the port holes an the courthouse
windows. The line
of guards in the jail yard wheeled and stood with
their faces upturned
to the windows.
There in the
sashless
window stood a man with black hair - Talton Hall.
He was going to
confess
- that was the rumor. His lawyers wanted him to
confess. The preacher
who
had been singing hymns with him wanted him to confess.
The man himself
wanted to confess, and how he was going to confess.
What deadly
mysteries
he might clear up if he would. His best friends put
the list of his
victims
no lower than thirteen - his enemies no lower than
thirty. And there
looking
up at him, were three women who he had widowed or
orphaned, and one
corner
of the jail yard still another, a little woman in
black - the widow of
the Norton Constable whom Hall had shot to death only
a year before.
Now Hall's lips
opened
and closed, and opened and closed again. Then he took
hold of the site
of the window and looked behind him. The sheriff
brought him a chair
and
he sat down.
At last Hall asked
that
he might give his sister a secret message. The Judge
who was also on
guard
felt obliged to deny the request and then Hall
haltingly asked aloud
that
his sister bring a white handkerchief and tie it
around his throat -
afterwards
- to hide the red mark of the rope. Tears welled in
the Judge's eyes.
He
pulled out his own handkerchief and pressed it into
the woman's hands.
But would Talt
confess
to all the murders he had committed? He had shot Harry
Maggard, an
uncle.
He had killed two brothers-in-law. He had killed Henry
Monk, Mack Hall.
Through cunning he had escaped punishment. Now he
could clear up these
cases and many more, if he would.
But he didn't admit
any
of his crimes. He rose and went out with a firm step.
I was one of
those
assigned to do duty inside the hanging box.
Hall stood as
motionless
as the trunk of an oak. The sheriff was a very
tenderhearted man and a
very nervous one, and the arrangements for the
execution were awkward.
Two upright beams had to be knocked from under the
trap door, so that
it
would rest on the short rope noose that had to be cut
before the door
would
fall. As each of these was knocked out the door sank
an inch, and the
suspense
was horrible. The poor wretch must have thought that
each stroke was
the
one that was to send him to eternity but not a muscle
moved. All was
ready
at last and the sheriff cried in aloud voice, 'May God
have mercy on
this
poor man's soul!" and struck the rope with a hatchet.
The black-capped
apparition shot down, and the sheriff ran, weeping,
out of the door of
the box."
Now let's go back to
Charles
Renfro's few last words about Talt Hall. He said, 'I
put the black hood
over Talt's head, and dropped the noose over his head.
After he was
dead
I felt terrible although I knew Talt was a bad man. I
sort of hoped I
wouldn't
have to help hang another one. But destiny didn't let
me escape.
The Red Fox Said
He Would Rise on
the Third
Day
The second man to be
hanged
at Wise courthouse while I was yet a member of the
court guard,"
Charles
Renfro continued, "was Dr. M. B. Taylor, better known
as the Red Fox.
It
was Doctor Taylor, officiating as U. S. Marshal along
with his work as
doctor and minister, who trailed Talt Hall from Wise
County to Memphis,
Tennessee and helped bring him back to justice.
While Hall was yet
being
guarded in the little jail house Dr. Taylor stole away
into the
mountains
and massacred five people out of a crowd of seven who
were crossing the
Pine Mountain at Pound Gap."
John Fox, Jr.,
who
wrote about Dr. Taylor called him the Red Fox, and
here's what he said
about him in Bluegrass and Rhododendron: "The Red Fox
of the mountains
was going to be hanged. Being a preacher, a herb
doctor, revenue
officer,
detective, crook, and assassin, he was going to preach
his own funeral
sermon on the Sunday before the day set for his
passing, which was
October
27, 1893. He was going to wear a suit of white and a
death cap of
white,
both made by his little old wife. Moreover, he would
have his body kept
unburied for three days, saying that, on the third
day, he would arise
and go about preaching.
On Sundays the Red
Fox
preached the Word; on other days he was a walking
arsenal, with a huge
50x75 Winchester over one shoulder, two belts of
gleaming cartridges
about
his waist, and a great pistol swung to either hip. In
the woods he'd
wear
moccasins with the heels forward, so that no man could
tell which way
he
had gone.
Sometimes he would
carry
a huge spy-glass, five feet long, with which he
watched his enemies
from
the mountain tops.
One of his enemies
was
Ira Mullins, a paralytic who lived at Pound. Ira made
moonshine liquor
and peddled it from a two-horse wagon bed filled with
straw. The Red
Fox,
while a U. S. Marshal, had engaged Ira in a gun
battle. Soon afterwards
the word got around that Ira would kill the Red Fox on
sight.
So, the crafty Red
Fox
decided to beat him to it. While guarding Talt Hall,
he had heard that
on May 14, 1892, Old Ira would bring a load of liquor
from Kentucky
through
Pound Gap.
With two
confederates,
Henan and Cal Fleming, the Ref Fox lay in wait at a
small cliff beside
the road just south of the Gap.
Ere long the wagon
came
into sight. A man by the name of John Chappel was in
the driver's seat
an beside him sat Ira's wife, Louranza. On a pile of
straw lay Old Man
Mullins, partially propped up. Behind the wagon walked
Ira's 14 year
old
son, John, and a boy named Greenberry Harris. Mrs.
Jane Mullins rode
horseback.
Her husband, Wilson Mullins, walked in front of the
wagon. (1)
When the wagon
rattled
within close range of the small cliff, the Red Fox and
his confederates
opened fire, killing all in the caravan except Jane
Mullins, riding
horseback,
and Ira's son John who was walking beside her.
(2)
The assassins fled
into
the woods. Mrs. Jane Mullins rode on into Wise, some
18 miles distant,
and reported the massacre to Sheriff John Miller. (3)
The Sheriff
organized
a posse of 22 men and a manhunt was begun that lasted
several days and
nights. The Flemings fled to West Virginia and were
not apprehended
until
two years later. (4) the Red Fox returned to his own
home in Wise and
hid
in his attic. Then one night his son Sylvan, a
respected businessman
and
surveyor living in Norton, five miles from Wise, took
his father to his
home. (5) The son insisted his father leave the
mountains and go to
Florida,
although the son testified in court that his father
wanted to stay and
stand trial.
The Red Fox decided
to
take his son's advice and, outfitted in new clothes,
mounted an empty
boxcar
standing in the yard at Norton and rode to Bluefield,
West Virginia,
from
which place he intended to hobo another train going
south. But somehow
the Wise County Commonwealth Attorney, Robert Bruce,
heard the Red
Fox's
being in a boxcar bound for Bluefield and wired the
Baldwin Detective
Agency
to apprehend him when he left the train. They did an
the fugitive was
returned
to Wise for trial.
Considerable
evidence
in the trial concerned the Red Fox's Winchester. It
had been known that
his rifle used rim-fire cartridges. Rim-fire shells
had been found at
the
murder scene. But when the jury examined the gun they
found it to be a
center-fire. However, upon close scrutiny they saw
that the plunger had
been cleverly changed to strike the center of a
cartridge instead of
the
rim. They then decided this clever man had tampered
with the firing
pin."
(6)
Now let's go back to
John
Fox, Jr.'s account of the Red Fox's last hours on
earth.
"The Red Fox
preached
his own funeral sermon on a Sunday before the day set
for execution and
a curious crowd gathered to hear him. He was led from
the jail. He
stood
on the jailer's porch with a little table in front of
him; on it lay a
Bible. On the other side of the table sat a little
palefaced old woman
in black, with a black sunbonnet drawn close to her
face. By the side
of
the Bible lay a few pieces of bread. It was the Fox's
last communion -
a communion which he administered to himself and in
which there was no
other soul on earth to join him, except the little old
woman in black.
It was pathetic
beyond
words when the old fellow lifted the bread and asked
the crowd to come
forward to partake with him in the last sacrament. Not
a soul moved,
only
the little old woman who had been ill-treated,
deserted by the old
fellow
for many years; only she of all the crowd gave any
answer, and she
turned
her face for an instant timidly toward him. With a
churlish gesture the
old man pushed the bread over toward her, and with
hesitating,
trembling
fingers she reached for it.
The sermon that
followed
was rambling, denunciatory, and unforgiving. Never did
he admit guilt.
On the last day the
Red
Fox appeared in his white suit. The little old woman
in black had even
made the cap which was to be drawn over his face at
the last moment -
and
she had made that white too.
He walked firmly to
the
scaffold steps, and stood there for one moment
blinking in the
sunlight,
his head just visible above the rude box."
Now, for the ending
of
this gruesome story we switch back to Charles Renfro,
who said, "For a
moment he stood viewing the rude gallows, and, seeming
to believe it
would
do the job, he suffered his hands to be tied behind
his him with a
white
handkerchief. One of the guards spread newspapers on
the gallows steps
and platform so that not a speck of dirt might touch
his shoes.
Once on the
platform,
the doctor requested the privilege of reading a
passage of scripture
and
praying. Down on his knees he prayed in a voice so
soft and low that
only
those very close to him could understand.
Sheriff Charles L.
Hughes
slipped the white hood over his head and the noose was
adjusted about
his
neck. Jeff Hunsucker, a deputy sheriff, excited
because of the crucial
moment, jolted the trap in a clumsy effort to cut the
trap rope and the
doctor crumpled to the floor.
The deputy waited
until
the doomed man could straighten up again and then he
tried his ax a
second
time.
The trap dropped and
the
doctor went down with it, a mass of white whirling
around and around.
The
rope twisted tight and then unwound, which kept the
struggling man
whirling
for some time.
When the twisting of
the
rope stopped the body was left to hang for 19 minutes
when Dr. H. M.
Miles
and Dr. T. M. Cherry examined the body, pronounced it
dead, and ordered
it delivered to the family.
As was his request,
the
body was kept up for three days. Some people believed
that the doctor
would
rise again; but on the third day all hopes vanished
and the body was
interred
on a hill above the courthouse square where it now
lies without
markers."
First Black Man
Hanged
"The first black
man to
be hanged here was Bob Foy, who killed a commissary
clerk at Toms
Creek.
Foy's wife was away from home and Foy, wanting her to
return, borrowed
enough money from the clerk to purchase train tickets.
The wife, however,
decided
not to come home and then Foy asked the store clerk to
take the tickets
as pay for the loan of money. The clerk refused. A
fight ensued. The
two
men tangled on the floor and while they were down Foy
shot the clerk.
A speedy trial
followed
and Foy was sentenced to be hanged July 1, 1902. But
before the day of
execution arrived Foy broke jail. He'd been kept in
the new jail. (Now
in 1971 being razed).
Along about this
time
we had a terrible time at the jail because of an
epidemic of smallpox.
I was by this time jailer. I was appointed when the
regular jailer died
of smallpox. It was very much up to me to decide what
ought to be done.
I had Foy to hunt
and
I had to wrestle with the epidemic. We had thirty
cases of the disease
among the inmates. These we got away to a temporary
building some three
miles out of town. The rest we moved to the Scott
County jail.
Now Foy, although at
large,
didn't go far. We found him one day down Indian Creek
sitting under a
tree,
waiting for someone to bring him back to jail.
He said he wasn't
afraid
of smallpox; and he'd rather be hanged than sleep out
at night with
snakes
crawling around. He escaped smallpox but he didn't
escape the noose. It
caught him July 1, 1902. And he seemed to be glad to
get it over with."
George Robinson
Hanged Twice
Exactly one month
from
Foy's execution, George Robinson, another black man,
was to meet his
death
by the noose. His execution was set to take place
between ten and three
o'clock August 1, 1902.
"I was still
jailer,"
Renfro went on, "It was again my job to inspect the
gallows and get the
rope ready. Wib didn't like to release the trap but
the job had to be
done
and he did it."
That big Negro, as
muscular
as a prize fighter, calmly stood and without protest
allowed the hood
to
be put over his head and the noose to be drawn about
his neck.
But when the trap
fell,
Robinson went all the way down to the ground. His neck
was so tough
that
the rope broke instead, and the doomed man crumpled
upon the ground and
still showed no sign of emotion.
The sheriff said
he'd
get a stronger rope and while he went to get it
Robinson walked back up
the steps and waited for the second tieing.
By that time all of
the
officials were more nervous about the gruesome affair
than the victim,
it seemed. It was a terrible thing to go through with
to tie another
noose
and put it over the man's head and fix the trap again
and make another
cut of the rope. But we had to do it. When the victim
fell he swung
back
and forth like a pendulum until he was pronounced dead
by the jail
physician.
Now that I was
jailer
and since it seemed that hangings were getting more
and more frequent,
I decided to visit other county seats and see what
sort of gallows they
had. I found a goo done at Whitesburg, Kentucky and I
brought a pattern
home.
So, I tore the old
gallows
down and with new lumber and bolts made one which
would not depend upon
the cutting of a rope to drop the trap but one whose
trap would drop by
pulling a lever."
Innocent Man
Hanged
And this new
gallows was
not long standing in the back yard of the court until
Eive Hopson was
sentenced
to die upon it.
Eive's trouble had
started
over the theft of a hen from John Salyer's hen roost
out at Glamorgan.
At the time two other men were with him. They were all
drunk. Each was
brought to trial. Two got terms in the penitentiary
and Eive got the
gallows.
I told Wib that I'd
done
everything that was my duty to do. I'd made a gallows
which was easy to
handle. All he'd have to do would be to spring the
trap by pulling the
lever. It'd be easy.
'Easy!' Wib said to
me,
'Charles, it's the hardest job I ever had to do.
Listen to him! He
still
says he's innocent and I half way believe he is.'
I'd been good to
Eive
in jail. He'd wanted to be baptized and I'd got a
minister and I'd
taken
him out to Flanary Creek and the rites were performed
in front of a
large
crowd.
At that baptizing
were
John Salyers' boys. Eive vowed to them that he hadn't
killed their
daddy
that night the hen roost was robbed. He said that he
was drinking along
with the other boys, but that he didn't fire a shot,
hope to die he
hadn't.
But, he said he'd
handed
his gun to the other boys and then went up into the
tree to get a
chicken,
like the two other men had told him to do. While he
was up there John
Salyers
burst out of the house shooting and then somebody shot
back and John
Salyers
was killed.
The two other men had
claimed
in court that Hopson had done the shooting and the
jury had believed
them.
There in the court
window
Hopson told the crowd that since Wib, the sheriff, had
tended to him as
a baby and had almost raised him, he hoped somebody
else would spring
the
trap.
Well, we went down
to
the gallows and I put the hood on Hopson's head and I
tied his hands
behind
him and I said that it was all I was going to do.
Then Wib took off
his
hat and he stood a moment in silence.
'May the Lord have mercy on your soul,
Eive,'
he said.
He pulled the level
and
the peg plopped out and down went the trap and
Hopson's body dropped
into
the box I'd made around the posts of the scaffold.
That was May 15,
1903.
The two other men
who'd
been indicted went to the State penitentiary. Later,
after being
released
from prison, one of them on his death bed confessed
to having fired the
shot that killed John Salyers.
Then it was that people knew an
innocent
man had been hanged.
They Hanged a
Preacher
Just a little more
than
four months after Hopson's hanging the gallows felt
the tread of
another
doomed man, Clifton Branham. Long before Hopson met
his fate, Branham's
case was hanging in court.
Branham had grown up
on
the Pound River and he's been in plenty of meanness in
Kentucky, where
he's served a term in prison. In fact it seemed that
he crossed back
and
forth over the Kentucky border when the law got to
trailing him.
He'd gone to the
Kentucky
penitentiary because of murder. But while he was in
prison in that
state
he turned religious and began preaching and reading
the Bible to his
fellow
inmates. The story of his preaching reached the
governor who released
him
and told him to go home to his wife and children who
lived in Virginia.
For a while he
roamed
over the hills, staying with relatives and friends.
Finally he decided
to go back to Kentucky since he and his wife couldn't
get along. But he
stopped short of the state line at his son-in-law's
where his wife was
staying and while there he got into a quarrel with
her, shot and killed
her.
As was his custom he
skipped
to Kentucky. Soon after his return to that state he
hired himself out
to
kill a man; and for the job he was to get as his wife
the daughter of
the
man for whom he was doing murder.
His crimes, however,
caught
up with him and he was lodged in a Kentucky jail.
Virginia authorities
prevailed upon the governor of Kentucky for the right
to bring him back
to Virginia and the Kentucky governor agreed, saying
that his home
county
had a wide reputation for hanging men anyhow and since
Branham needed
to
be hanged he should be brought back.
So he was tried at
Wise
and found guilty of murder in the first degree.
When Judge Matthews
pronounced
sentence on Branham, he said: 'You're a mean man,
Branham. You're
dangerous
to society. You've killed three men and your wife. On
next Friday,
September
25, 1903, you'll hang by the neck until you're dead,
dead, dead.'
Branham was defiant
to
the very last. Hanging seemed to hold no worry for
him. It was with a
sneer
and a hard face he went up onto the scaffold and stood
for the black
hood.
It was the last I slipped over a human head and the
last that anyone
slipped
over a head at the Wise courthouse for the Legislature
of Virginia
passed
a law putting an end to hangings.
(References 1, 2,
3, 4, 5, and 6 are
to the
court transcript of the Red Fox trial as published in
Johnson's History
of Wise County.)
* Local Corruption of "Narrated."
Pages 35 to 44
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