Hawes murders

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The Hawes murders were a notorious and sensational crime discovered in December 1888 that produced a deadly riot and gained nationwide media attention for the young city of Birmingham.

Seven year old May Hawes was found dead in East Lake on December 4, 1888 by boaters John Keith and Ben Culbalson. Jefferson County coroner Alfred Babbitt conducted an autopsy on site and determined the cause of death to be murder. Despite being viewed by thousands at Lockwood & Miller's Funeral Parlor it wasn't until the next day that she was identified as the daughter of Richard and Emma Hawes by a butcher.

Richard Hawes was a Georgia-Pacific engineer. His wife was an alcoholic and Mary helped to care for her mother and younger sister, Irene. She had another son, Willie, who lived with his father's family in Atlanta. According to witness Fannie Bryant who was arrested at the inquest, she had helped Emma pack for a trip to retrieve her son. She had last seen May the weekend before. Other witnesses claimed that Richard Hawes was divorced and had gone to Columbus, Mississippi to take a new wife. When a telegram came to the Age-Herald office announcing Hawes' marriage to the former Mayes Story, as well as their train itinerary, the police prepared to meet their suspect at the station.

In custody, Hawes pleaded his innocence and wrote beseeching letters to his new bride asking forgiveness for not mentioning having daughters with his former wife. He claimed to have completed his divorce to Emma and arranged for the care of his daughters, though no record was ever found. The question of whether he had a motive for murder stayed the growing mobs as the investigation continued. Rumors that Emma was known to have a sum of cash lent credence to the idea that Fannie or her companion, Albert Patterson, were behind the deaths.

Beneficiaries of a growing national scandal, the Age-Herald vied with the Atlanta Constitution and other papers to uncover the juiciest details and offer the most insightful opinions on the case.

Led to the area by the discovery of a bloody hatchet and a torn ribbon, police recovered the bodies of Emma and Irene, bound in weights, in the lake that is now the site of Highland Park Golf Course. A mob formed late that night, perhaps 3,000 strong when it reached the city jail. Sheriff Joseph Smith apparently authorized his deputies to fire into the crowd when things started to get out of control. Ten died in the violence, including postmaster Maurice Throckmorton, a deputy U. S. Marshal, a civil engineer and a painter. Smith and Police chief O. A. Pickard were both placed under arrest as the state militia restored order. Governor Thomas Seay came to Birmingham to discuss resurrecting the city's soiled reputation in the wake of these sensational "horrors".

Smith and Pickard were released the next year following a deadlocked jury. Hawes was found guilty on May 23, 1889 of murdering his family and was sentenced to die by hanging. A request from a St Louis circus owner to display the caged murderer in his sideshow was rejected. Dressed to the nines with a geranium in his lapel, Hawes was executed by Sheriff Smith on February 28, 1890. He was buried by his brother, Jim, in an unmarked grave in the family's plot at Oakland Cemetery in Atlanta. Fannie Bryant was also sentenced to death for her suspected role in aiding Hawes. She died in a prison riot before the sentence was carried out.

References

  • Jones, Pam. (Spring 2006) "The Hawes Murders." Alabama Heritage No. 80, pp. 34-40
  • West, Goldsmith B. (1888) The Hawes Horror Birmingham
  • "Dick Hawes Hanged for the Murder of his Wife and Little Girls: History of the Blackest Crime That Blackens the Pages of Criminal History With the Sensational Features of the Case. Hawe's Neck Broken." (February 28, 1890) Dallas Times Herald. [1] - accessed April 10, 2006