On this date in 1903, Dora Wright was hanged at McAlester in Indian Territory — the present-day U.S. state of Oklahoma.
Wright beat and tortured to death a 7-year-old orphan in her charge named Annie Williams. Wright tormented the little girl over several months until she finally succumbed to a thrashing in February 1903. It was, the local paper said, “the most horrible and outrageous” crime in memory in the area; Wright’s jury only needed 20 minutes’ deliberation to condemn her.
As Oklahoma was yet four years shy of statehood, “Indian Territory” jurisdiction — and with it any decision on executive clemency — fell to U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt. The inclination of the Rough Rider is aptly conveyed by the words of Attorney General Philander Knox‘s brief on the case to the President, which were released for press consumption:
The real facts in this case are that this woman tortured to death a little child seven years old, her niece, whom she was pretending to care for and support. She whipped the child most unmercifully with large switches, struck it about the hand and face so as to cause wounds sufficient to produce death, burned holes in its legs and thighs with a heated poker, and committed other nameless atrocities upon the person of the child. The testimony shows that the woman pursued a course of cruelty which was fiendish and barbarous … The only ground upon which her pardon is sought is that she is a woman, and that the infliction of the death penalty upon a woman would be a shock to the moral sense of the people in the community.
T.R. was incredulous at the feminine special pleading.
“If that woman was mean enough to do a thing like that,” Roosevelt said, “she ought to have the nerve to meet her punishment.”
Wright did have that nerve in the end, and was noted for the calm with which she comported herself on the scaffold. (She was hanged alongside another fellow, Charles Barrett, who shot a man dead in a robbery.)
From the Duluth (Minn.) News-Tribune, July 18, 1903.
On this day..
- 1821: Fulgencio Yegros, former Paraguay head of state
- 1931: Charles Simpson, "make it snappy"
- 1857: John Dorsey
- 1946: Draza Mihailovic, Chetnik commander
- 1920: Gerald Smyth, Royal Irish Constabulary officer
- 1787: Jacob "Hannikel" Reinhard
- 1651: Wilhelm Biener, faithful counsellor
- 1537: Janet Douglas, Lady Glamis
- 1798: Henry Joy McCracken
- 1749: Samuel Henzi, excluded
- 1793: Charlotte Corday, Marat's murderess
- 1918: Tsar Nicholas II and his family