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John F. Morgan was the last man hanged publicly in West
Virginia, on December 16, 1897, after he was convicted of murdering
Chloe Greene and two of her three children in the Grass Lick area of
Jackson County. The execution drew over 5,000 spectators, including a New
York Sun special
reporter assigned to cover the spectacle.
The chain of events that led to the hanging began less
than six weeks earlier on November 3, 1897. Morgan, a local handyman and
friend of the Greene family, hid in the pre-dawn darkness with a hatchet
in hand. One by one he attacked his victims, delivering fatal blows to
Mrs. Greene, Jimmy Greene and Matilda Pfost. Another daughter, Alice
Pfost, was attacked but survived. It was she who alerted neighbors to
the crime.
Morgan was arrested within
hours and incarcerated in Ripley. He was indicted on November
4, tried and convicted the following day, and sentenced the
day after that. Two weeks before the hanging, Morgan escaped.
He was at large two days before he was finally captured. Excitement
was aroused by Morgan's repeated oaths that he would never hang,
at least not on the scheduled date, but the springing of the
lever came on December 16.
Shortly after the sensational event, the West Virginia
state legislature passed a bill prohibiting public executions. It was
among the first states to do so.
See also Capital Punishment
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