Shotgun Wedding
By Mark Gribben
Was 23-year-old Lulu Prince Kennedy of Kansas City, Missouri, a
high-strung young lady driven insane and most cruelly
wronged by men whose intentions were less-than-honorable, or was
she a conniving schemer and cold-blooded murderer?
The courts were divided over the question, but in the end, the
Supreme Court of Missouri decided that her trial for the
murder of her husband, Phillip H. Kennedy, a clerk and solicitor,
was unfairly tainted by the prosecutor’s statement that
she had previously consorted with a professional baseball player
and thus Lulu’s character had already been ruined before
she met Kennedy.
The Supreme Court also found that Lulu’s father, a pool hall
operator, and her gun-toting brothers did not conspire with
her to kill Phillip, despite the fact that they forced him at
gunpoint to marry her and several times threatened his life
when he sought to annul the shotgun wedding.
In 1903, the Missouri Supreme Court tossed out her second-degree
murder conviction and 10-year prison sentence, and
ordered a new trial.
In the last year of the 19th century, Phillip Kennedy frequently
called on Lulu Prince, a stenographer who lived with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Prince, and her two brothers,
Will and Bert Prince (apparently a “world-famous”
professional mandolin player) near Olive and Peery Avenues in
Kansas City.
Kennedy, who was in his mid-30s, worked for the Merchants’
Dispatch Transportation Company. He lived with his mother and
father, brother and sister on Troost Avenue and had known Lulu for
about two years. In April 1900, Will Prince confronted
Kennedy and inquired whether his attentions were serious toward
her. When Kennedy said no, Prince asked that Kennedy
cease calling on her.
Kennedy agreed and the record shows that he and Lulu met just
twice after that. Kennedy later began calling on another
young lady and they became engaged. The banns were published
around December 1900.
In the summer of 1900 Case Patten, a professional baseball player
was recruited from New York to play ball in Kansas
City and became acquainted with Lulu. During the course of their
friendship, Patten gave her his gold watch and chain,
which she carried and she loaned him a diamond ring, worth $20,
which he wore.
Lulu called frequently at the boarding house where Patten, a
southpaw pitcher, was rooming and he often took walks with
her and took her riding. Apparently to Patten, this was simply a
summer fling, and when the season ended, he returned to
New York, taking the ring as a memento.
(The next year Casey Lyman “Pat” Patten hit the majors with the
Washington Senators and enjoyed an average career.
Patten ended his career with the Boston Americans six years before
Babe Ruth joined the team. Of course, the best pitcher
on the Boston team at the time was Cy Young, who never won the Cy
Young Award for Best Pitcher because he was so good,
they named the award after him. Patten also played on the 1903
World Series winning team. He had a lifetime ERA of 3.36
and a 105-128 career win/loss ratio. Patten was quite the
workhorse: He pitched 206 complete games over 8 years and had
17 shutouts.)
On October 15, 1900, Lulu went to the police station in Kansas
City and reported that Case Patten had left town with her
diamond ring. Detective Andy O’Hare took the report and Lulu
requested that the Chief of Police write a letter to the
Chief of Police of Westport, New York, asking that Mr. Patten
return Lulu’s ring. The chief sent the following letter:
Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 15, 1900. “Chief of Police, Westport, N. Y
“Dear Sir: Lulu Prince called at my office this morning and
reported that last July she loaned a small diamond ring to
Case Patten, who was a ball player with our local club the last
year, and that he left for his home (which is your city)
Saturday night, taking the ring with him. Will you kindly see Mr.
Patten and get the ring and express it to me?
Thanking you in advance, I am, very truly, etc.
However, after several weeks of waiting without response, Lulu
lost patience and indicated to Detective O’Hare that she
was going to travel to Westport to retrieve her ring.
When the detective told her that it would be cheaper to let Patten
keep the ring, Lulu replied that she intended to go
and see Patten and get the ring back if it cost her several times
its value. She left for Westport after her brother,
Will, tried to dissuade her from the trip and offered to buy her
another ring, but she refused the offer.
Shortly after her return she met O’Hare, showed him a ring, and
told him she had been to Westport, New York, and had
seen Patten and had recovered the ring.
A month later, Lulu appeared at the offices of a local doctor,
referred in the records only as Dr. Cross in the Rialto
Building, and stated that she was the wife of Case Patten, a
professional ballplayer and that she was pregnant. She told
Dr. Cross that she and Case had been secretly wed and that if news
of the marriage leaked out, he would lose his position
as a ballplayer. Thus, she asked Dr. Cross to perform an abortion.
Dr. Cross refused to perform the abortion and did not
examine Lulu to determine if, in fact, she was pregnant.
In early December, she again approached Dr. Cross, told him that
another doctor had taken care of the problem and asked
him for a treatment for nervousness. The doctor gave her a
prescription for “a simple nerve sedative.”
One can imagine the shock that Phillip Kennedy experienced on
December 4, 1900 when he received a telephone call from a
lawyer named Charles H. Nearing, requesting his immediate presence
at the Nelson Building on the corner of Missouri
Avenue and Main Street to discuss important business.
When Kennedy inquired about the nature of the business, Nearing
replied that he would have to marry Lulu Prince or her
father would kill him.
Kennedy went to the Nelson Building and met with Nearing, but told
him there was no reason why he should marry Lulu, and
in fact, he was engaged to another young lady.
Upon leaving Nearing’s office, Kennedy met C.W. Prince and his
son, Will, who were in the company of Lulu. Witnesses
would later testify that earlier in the morning, Will had “oiled
his pistol” and put it in his pocket, and that outside
Nearing’s office, C.W. Prince told Kennedy that either he would
marry Lulu, or he would be dead in five minutes.
“At this his courage failed him and he went with the defendant,
her father and brother to the recorder’s office for a
marriage license,” the Missouri Supreme Court’s decision reads.
County Courthouse While sitting at the table in the recorder’s
office waiting for a deputy to make out the license,
Kennedy saw Fred Bullene, the courthouse reporter for the Kansas
City Star, and, apparently recognizing him, got up from
his chair and started towards him. However, his future
father-in-law stopped him (”his right hand remaining significantly
in his overcoat pocket”) and ordered Kennedy to sit down.
“After Kennedy’s futile effort to communicate with Bullene he made
no further effort to escape, but went resignedly to
Judge Gibson’s chambers where a marriage ceremony was performed,”
the court record shows.
After the ceremony, Kennedy went back to work and the Prince clan
returned home. That night Kennedy visited the Prince
house, but slept at his home with his family. The next time he saw
Lulu, there would be shooting.
Several days after the marriage, Lulu visited Bullene at the
Kansas City Star offices and asked him to write an article
for publication about her marriage to Kennedy. Bullene asked her
what had prompted the marriage, and Lulu replied that
Kennedy had jilted her and for that she wanted him “roasted.”
Along with her brother, she admitted that it had been a forced
marriage, but that they didn’t want that fact published
because it would invalidate it. Lulu swore to Bullene and the city
editor, Captain Wade Mountfort, that there had never
been any intimacy between her and Kennedy.
Will Prince was still quite angry with Kennedy, called him “a
puppy” and said he didn’t deserve to live.
“I have had one round with that fellow, I gave him his choice of
marrying the girl or going to hell, and he chose to
marry her,” the witnesses recalled Will saying.
Bullene agreed to accompany Lulu to Kennedy’s home. He talked
privately with Kennedy, who denied that he had ever been
engaged to the girl. The Star never printed anything about the
marriage.
Kennedy continued to ignore Lulu and the Prince family grew
angrier.
“That boy will never live with your daughter,” the assistant
county recorder testified that he told C.W. Prince.
“He had better do the right thing, or the papers will have
something to write about,” C.W. replied.
On New Year’s Day, 1901, C.W. sent a bill by messenger to Kennedy.
C. W. PRINCE,
Exchange Pool Hall, 717 Central.
Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 31, 1900.
Mr. Phillip H. Kennedy, Dr. to C. W. Prince.
To one month’s board and maintenance of your wife . . . . $ 40.00
Please remit. C. W. Prince.
Two days later, C.W. and Will showed up at the Merchant’s Dispatch
Office, again with their hands “suggestively in their
overcoat pockets,” and demanded payment.
“You can sue me for maintenance,” Kennedy replied. “I’m acting
under the advice of counsel.”
C.W. then pounced on Kennedy, who eventually freed himself from
his father-in-law’s clutches, and managed to find a
constable walking his beat. Will Prince described his
brother-in-law as “the most immaculate coward Christ ever died to
save.”
Less than a week later, Kennedy filed a petition to annul the
marriage, which was published in the Star on January 9.
The day it was published, Lulu and Will Prince showed up at the
Ridge Building where Kennedy worked, apparently studying
“the lay of the ground.”
On January 10, Lulu returned to Dr. Cross and confessed that she
was not really Mrs. Case Patten, but was, in fact Mrs.
Kennedy and that she was still pregnant. She begged Dr. Cross to
tell Kennedy that she was with child, but Cross declined
to do so. She pleaded that she was afraid that when her family was
served with the annulment papers that her father and
brothers would harm her husband. Finally, Dr. Cross agreed to go
to the Ridge Building to visit Kennedy. Lulu said she
would follow him.
“You go down and see him, and then I will come down,” the doctor
testified she told him.
Cross and Kennedy spoke briefly, and then Lulu showed up.: “Are
you going to live with me?” she asked.
“No,” Kennedy said, sealing his doom.
Dr. Cross had turned his back and was headed toward the elevator
when he heard the report of a revolver. Tom Kennedy,
the victim’s brother and Roland Butler, another employee of the
Merchant’s Dispatch, raced into the hallway, but it was
too late. She emptied the gun into her husband. Kennedy staggered
back into the office and fell.
Meanwhile, Tom Kennedy was attacked by Will Prince, who emerged
from a nearby stairwell. The two of them wrestled and
Tom Kennedy got Will Prince up against the wall. Lulu approached
Tom and Roland, who were holding Will Prince.
“Turn that man loose,” she said, coolly. “It was I who did the
shooting.”
Inside the office, Kennedy was dying. His brother rushed back into
the office and Phillip’s dying declaration was that
“it wasn’t her gun that did it.”
He had been hit six times. One of the shots entered from the front
of his body, one from the side, two in the back, one
pierced his ear and the other struck his forehead. When Kennedy
was pronounced dead, Lulu stepped over to his body.
In front of the witnesses, Lulu then kicked Kennedy in the face
and said, “he will never seduce another girl.”
When Patrolman Crane arrived to arrest Lulu, he took hold of her
hand.
“Turn my hands loose, Officer,” she said. “I want to fix my hair.”
At the police station, Lulu was visited by her father and brother
Bert. The police matron, Mrs. Paul Moore, recalled on
the stand that the three of them were laughing and smiling. It was
later revealed that Lulu was not pregnant and never
had been.
Her defense at trial was “hysterical insanity.”
In its opening statement, the defense contended that the the sole
cause of the killing was that she had been wronged by
Kennedy and, distressed in mind by this fact, she had lost her
ability to distinguish between right and wrong as to that
particular act, and while in this condition of mind had shot him.
The prosecution’s case was that Lulu’s interactions with Case
Patten demonstrated that Kennedy could not have
“debauched” her.
“It will be shown in evidence by reputable people that in the
years prior to the time when the defendant in this case
came into the life of the deceased, her reputation, her conduct
and her course of life were such that she couldn’t have
been led by him aside from the path of virtue.”
The State was permitted to introduce the fact that Lulu kept
company with a baseball player who lived in New York, and
when he went away with her diamond ring she went there in October
and got it. These facts were offered, the prosecution
argued on appeal, as showing that her conduct was that of a
rational person, but the Missouri Supreme Court held that
they were offered for the purpose of besmirching Lulu’s character,
“as is shown by the stress placed upon the fact, both
in the prosecuting attorney’s opening statement and throughout the
trial, and by the irrelevant questions of the trial
judge, that the man whom she kept company with was a baseball
player.”
Lulu went on trial again in early 1904 and appeared in court
dressed in “deep mourning” clothes because of the recent
drowning death of her brother, Albert. The trial was rocked by her
mother’s revelation that while in prison Lulu had
secretly married an attorney, John Kramer.
“The defendant fainted and it was necessary to carry her from the
room,” after her mother reluctantly admitted the
marriage had occurred, a dispatch in the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution reported.
After a week-long trial, the second jury acquitted her on the
grounds of “emotional insanity.” Jurors also agreed that
she had since recovered and therefore it was not necessary for her
to be institutionalized. After her exoneration Lulu
became an actress, appearing around the country in a melodrama
entitled The Injured Wife.
Malefactorsregister.com
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