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Charity
LAMB
Same day
Charity Lamb Trial: 1854
Law.jrank.org
Defendant: Charity Lamb Crime Charged: Murder Chief Defense Lawyers: James K. Kelly, Milton Elliot Chief Prosecutor: Noah Huber Judge: Cyrus Olney Place: Oregon City, Oregon Territory Date of Trial: September 11-16, 1854 Verdict: Guiltyof second-degree murder Sentence: Life imprisonment
SIGNIFICANCE: Charity Lamb was the Pacific
Northwest's first convicted murderess. Her case represents one of the
earliest known self-defense arguments predicated on what today would
be called the spousal abuse syndrome. Then, as now, that defense ran
against the traditional notion that in order for self-defense to be
justified, the threat defended against had to be imminent and not
merely inevitable.
On a Saturday evening, May 13, 1854, in a lonely
pioneer cabin deep in the woods and hills of the Oregon frontier, a
settler family was seated around the supper table. Four young sons and
a teenage daughter, Mary Ann, were listening to their father,
Nathaniel's, yarn about the bear he had shot at that day's hunt. A
baby was cradled nearby. The woman of the house left the table, went
to a woodpile, got an axe, came behind her husband's chair and drove
the axe blade into the back of his head two times. Her name was
Charity Lamb. Her actions betrayed that name, for in that moment she
was neither charitable nor a lamb.
Settlers Shocked By Murder
Settlers throughout the Willamette Valley reacted with horror.
Newspapers called it "revolting … cold-blooded … inhuman" and named
the culprit a "monster." When her first trial date was postponed,
those anxious for speedy justice labeled the delay a "farce." The
Oregon Spectator said:
"Think of it ladies! If any of you feel
disposed to walk up behind your husbands or fathers and chop their
heads open, why, just pitch in—you are safe in doing so!"
On September 11, her trial began in Oregon City in the U.S. District
Court for the Oregon Territory. The prisoner stood before the
presiding judge, Cyrus Olney. Carrying an infant in her arms,
according to the Oregon Spectator she was:
"pale and sallow … emaciated as a
skeleton, apparently fifty years of age … Her clothing was thin and
scanty, and much worn and torn, and far from clean … She had a sad,
abstracted and downcast look"
Lamb's court-appointed lawyers pled her "not guilty." In selecting the
jury, the prosecutor sought to know whether the panelists had any
hesitation about hanging a woman. A woman had never before been
sentenced to die on the frontier or anywhere in the federal judicial
system. The 12 jurors eventually selected were all men. The law did
not allow women to serve on juries—not even in the trial of one of
their peers.
Defendant's Children Testify
The trial began when the coroner established that
the victim died in his bed one week after the infliction of two cuts
that went through the top of the skull and into the brain.
Identification of Lamb as the culprit was easy. She
implied her involvement by fleeing the scene. Furthermore, she told
the doctor and the constable that she "did not mean to kill the
critter, … only intended to stun him" and "she was sorry she had not
struck him a little harder." Then too, her dying husband asked his
wife, "My dear, why did you kill me for?" But the saddest evidence
came from her own children. Son Thomas testified that he "saw her
strike him one blow on the head with the axe." Son Abram testified
that his father "fell over and scrambled about a little."
Finally the prosecutor had to show premeditation.
Here, motive was the gate and a man named Collins was the key. The
doctor testified that:
"there was a love
affair between Collins and Mary Ann [the daughter]; that she [Charity]
favored the suit, and Lamb opposed it; that she was mortified and
vexed about it, for Collins was so nice a man"
That dispute blossomed into rage when, one week
prior to the killing, Charity helped Mary Ann compose a love letter to
Collins. Before it could be sent, Nathaniel discovered it, destroyed
the letter, and threatened to kill Collins.
An axe in the back of the head was further proof of
premeditation. It showed a planned selection of time, place, and
weapon. Then too, she showed no sign of remorse. After the killing she
was found smoking her pipe at fireside in a distant neighbor's cabin,
her only concern being whether Nathaniel could come find her.
The Defense: Insanity
The first line of defense was insanity. Lamb's
lawyers called her a "monomaniac." While the doctor described her as
"very much excited … looked wild-like out of her eyes," he
nevertheless "thought she was pretending. " Although her mind may have
been deranged, there was not enough to show moral ignorance,
the traditional test of legal insanity.
As a second defense, her lawyers argued that she
did not intend to kill her victim; "she only meant to stun him until
she could get away." But that defense beggared reason: a blow with an
axe blade instead of its butt was hardly the choice for stunning.
Finally, Lamb's lawyers urged that she killed to
save herself from being killed. Throughout her marriage, Nathaniel had
physically abused her. The children testified that once he threw a
hammer at her and put a gash in her forehead. On several occasions
when Lamb was sick in bed, Nathaniel threatened her with violence and
ordered her to get up and work. One winter, "he knocked her down with
his fists and kicked her over several times in the snow." Lamb told
others that her husband also tried to poison her.
The children testified that their parents quarreled
"lots of times." The quarrels sometimes ended with Lamb fleeing the
encounter but having to turn back when her pursuing husband threatened
to shoot her. Nathaniel had threatened to kill his wife and children
if ever they told of his thefts of a horse and an ox. There was also
evidence of Nathaniel's intemperate use of alcohol.
The final straw was the rage that followed the
conflict over the love letter to Collins. Nathaniel had promised to
kill Lamb, take the boys, and desert to California. One week before
the killing, he told his wife that she "would not live on his expense
longer than a week; that he was going to kill her next Saturday
night"—May 13. The threat was now keyed to a specific time. During
that week he sold his mare to make ready for the trip. When Saturday
came, before he went off on his bear hunt, the children saw him fire a
shot toward their mother.
In summation to the jury, Lamb's counsel did not
emphasize self-defense. Instead they chose to rampage against the sins
of capital punishment and to focus on the notion that Charity's mind
was incapable of rational judgment.
Oddly enough, it was Judge Olney who stressed
self-defense in his charge to the jury. He bent the law of
self-defense toward a leniency not today and not then legally
warranted. He instructed that she must be found innocent if she "acted
out of a genuine belief in self-preservation," even if that "belief
was a delusion of a disordered mind."
The Verdict
The jury was out more than one half a day when they
returned to court with a question. They had boiled the matter down to
the dregs of self-defense. What still simmered was: "What was meant by
imminent danger, such as would justify killing?" They were apparently
convinced that Nathaniel was a threat to her life but not at the very
moment he was killed. How immediate did the danger have to be?
Reluctantly, Judge Olney had to tell the jurymen
that a justifiable killing should be at that instant unavoidable: "If
she saw that danger, before he returned home, it was her duty to have
gone away."
The jury retired and had their verdict swiftly:
"Charity Lamb is guilty of the killing purposely and maliciously … but
without… premeditation and do recommend her to the mercy of the
Court."
The next day Lamb stood before the bench with her
baby in her arms. Judge Olney asked her if she had anything to say
before sentencing. She had not testified at trial. She spoke for the
first time and the only time in the record: "Well I don't know that I
murdered him. He was alive when I saw him last… I knew he was going to
kill me."
The judge said, "The jury thinks you ought to have
gone away, in his absence."
To that, Lamb offered: "Well. He told me not to go,
and if I went that he would follow me, and find me somewhere, and he
was a mighty good shot… I did it to save my life."
Judge Olney may have been hard put to utter the
sentence mandated by law for second-degree murder:
"The jury …
recommended you to mercy. But the law gives the court no discretion …
The sentence therefore is, that you be conveyed to the penitentiary of
this territory and there imprisoned, and kept at hard labor, so long
as you shall live."
Lamb wept and was led from the courtroom still
carrying her baby, which would soon be taken from her.
She was taken to the prison in Portland, where she
was confined with six other male inmates. Five years later she was
still jailed there, doing the wash for the warden's family.
Missionaries inspecting the prison noted that "she is not of sound
mind." In 1862, she was transferred to the Hawthorne Insane Asylum.
The law took no account of her predicament—a choice
between waiting for menacing immediacy or fleeing into a wild frontier
without her children, without provender, without barter, without
refuge, shelter, or whatever else it takes to survive while pioneering
in a rugged and paternalistic society. Her judge, jury, lawyers,
witnesses, and jailers had all been men. The media too were male
reporters who, throughout her ordeal, were printing sermons such as:
"There must be a man
born in the world for every woman—one whom, to see would be to love,
to reverence, to adore … that she would recognize him at once her true
lord"
True to the sentence mandated, she was kept behind walls so long as
she lived. She died in the asylum in 1879—her family gone—her
gravesite unattended—forgiveness never given.
—RonaldB.Lansing
Suggestions for Further Reading
Lansing, Ronald B. "The Tragedy of Charity Lamb, Oregon's First
Convicted Murderess." Oregon Historical Quarterly 40 (Spring
2000).