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Jane
WILLIAMS
By Laura Wilkerson - Salon.com
The tidy, respectable home of the Young Winston
family of Richmond, Virginia was a place as tense as it was
diverse in mid-July of 1852. The occupants of the Winston home
that summer numbered eight. The primary occupants were Mr. Joseph
P. Winston, 27, the young Master of the house, an “esteemed
merchant” of the firm Nance and Wilson, his wife Virginia, 29, and
their “interesting little daughter about nine months old.” There
had been another interesting Winston a year earlier and to that
unfortunate sprite we will return later.
Far secondary in status in the Winston
household were the enslaved people living in the house which was
situated in a residential neighborhood on “the northern extremity
of 7th Street near the City Spring.” Principle of these
to our narrative were carpenter John Williams, who was sometimes
rented out as a day laborer by his owner along with John’s wife
Jane, a housemaid and nurse who is described in the record by one
who saw her on the gallows as, “a yellow woman of ordinary size,
apparently 35 or 40 years of age, hair nearly strait, and with
features indicative of great firmness,” and a “mulatto” meat
seller at her trial adds that “she had but one eye.” Jane’s little
daughter lived with the pair. Also in the household was Nelly, a
cook who was a gift from the Winston Plantation when the young
couple married and a young woman of about 23 or 24 years of age
named Anna whose services were leased from a lady who found
herself with surplus labor on her hands. Nelly’s husband, Joseph
Scott, was the property of Richard Archer but he often came and
went to and from the Winston residence.
Joseph and Virginia Winston were “both amongst
the most amiable and popular of the whole community,” and
considered assets to their social set but inside their home
tensions had been brewing throughout the summer. Mrs. Winston had
been ill and the weekend preceding July 19th found the
household, save for Anna, who had run away after being whipped by
Mr. Winston, packing for an extended stay up North. Jane Williams
was angry at the Winstons who were threatening to sell her apart
from her child. Jane had ceased sleeping in the same bed as her
husband and instead preferred sleeping with her daughter in the
kitchen, sharing a bed “about four feet long.” Her husband, John,
“objected to her sleeping with the child,” but Jane persisted in
the practice and so John told his wife that, “if she did not stop
it, I would cut the bed up, so we could sleep together.” On the
night of July 18th, a Sunday, Jane returned to the
marital bed.
On the morning of July 19th Jane
opened the house and then calmly reported to Nelly, who was
working in the kitchen, that, “she believed the white folks were
dead – she couldn’t wake ‘em.”
Nelly took Jane at her word and ran screaming
through the streets until she came to the home of Anna’s owner,
Mrs. Blair. Mrs. Blair and one of the people enslaved to her, Orey
Jones, went to the Winston house only to discover Mr. and Mrs.
Winston only to discover the couple in bed with their child in a
cradle in the same room, “weltering in their blood and butchered
in the most horrible means.”
“When discovered, Mrs. W. and her child were in
the last struggles and agonies of death, and Mr. W. was writhing
with pain of his wounds, insensible from their effects, and was
also supposed to be dying. Their heads were literally cut and
hacked to pieces. - Mrs. W. had as many as half a dozen deep cuts
about her face and head, out of which her brains were oozing –
gashes apparently made with an axe or heavy hatchet; and Mr. W.
had three severe cuts on the top and back of his head and other
injuries, apparently made with the same or a similar instrument.
The child appeared to have been killed by dashing its head against
a wall, or by having received blows with some heavy instrument,
its head and breast exhibiting severe bruising.”
Joseph P. Winston would live although he would
remain in a coma for several days and would continue on with a
“swimming” in his head. He would remember nothing of the attack.
Virginia Winston and her infant daughter would die.
The authorities were immediately notified, as
was Mr. Winston’s brother, Bickerton L. Winston. Bickerton entered
the room assigned to John and Jane Williams, the one Jane had
returned to only the night before. In it he spotted a filthy
bucket of standing water. He rolled up his sleeves and fished to
the bottom of it and, “dragged up a bunch of hair belonging to a
white female. Because of the Offensive nature of the water, I went
to the spring and rinsed the hair. Afterward I drained the bucket
and found other hair, apparently cut, and an eyebrow or lash.”
On further search a hatchet was found hidden
under a pile of scraps in the same room. The hatchet had been
washed but traces of blood remained. To be on the safe side, the
entire remaining household was arrested and taken to jail.
A coroner’s jury was called that same day. John
testified that, “I like Mr. and Mrs. Very well,” but he did, “not
know whether my wife was satisfied with Mr. and Mrs. Winston’s
treatment or not, though I heard her complain of Mr. Winston and
request him to sell her.”
John also admitted that, “Jane told him she
intended to kill Mr. & Mrs. Winston, but that he did not believe
it any more than he could fly into the sky. He said he did not
think any Woman would attempt such a thing, although they might be
disposed to talk of it.”
John testified that he first learned of the
tragedy when, “my wife waked me, and called me by saying, “I
believe everyone in the house is dead.” I ran to the window and
haled my wife, but she would not stop.”
Nelly’s husband, Joseph Scott, testified that
John ran to the doorway of the Winston’s bedroom, then stopped and
uttered, “Lord have mercy.” Scott observed John, “seemed
distressed and would not come in.”
Jane denied all knowledge of the crime. She
claimed that she had used the hatchet to cut up a joint of meat
that she had purchased from, “a yellow man at the New Market,” in
order, “to make soup.” She was contradicted in this by Nelly who
stated that the Winstons had eaten, “bacon, cabbage and apple
dumplings for dinner – no beef or soup.” And by John Williams who
claimed that it was he who did the marketing and by Andrew Kinney,
a person enslaved to Mr. Shedd the butcher, who testified that he,
“did not think there was any other mullatto man selling meat in
the market. His stand was at the entrance of the Market on
Marshall Street. He did not recall seeing any woman on Sunday
morning in the market with only one eye.”
Jane attempted to throw suspicion toward the
missing Anna, claiming that, “a gentleman friend of A. threatened
to, “knock Winston in the head some of these times” because A.
could not come out.” Nelly, who was raised with Anna, seemed to
lend some substance to this claim by testifying that, “I have not
seen Anna since Friday night. Anna used to see a young man, but
afterward became so base that the young men all left her,” but
Nelly also swore that, “Jane has said she did not like Mr. and
Mrs. W.”
It was then announced that Anna had been found
and she was brought before the jury. Anna testified that on
Saturday she had stayed with a White woman and, “I slept in Mr.
Branch’s factory Sunday night with a white man…Jane say she did
not like Mrs. Winston and never would…Jane says she never forgets
or forgives anything done to her. – Master Joe threatened to sell
her without her child – I heard she was suspected of poisoning the
other child of Mr. W. that died.”
John and Jane Williams were remanded to jail to
await trial. A few days after the coroner’s jury, Jane, “was
visited in her cell by the Rev. Mr. Ryland, pastor of the African
Baptist Church, of which Jane Williams was a member, and exhorted
her to make peace with God, as she undoubtedly would be hung. Jane
replied that she intended to do so and that there was something on
her mind which she wished to tell him. The minister listened for a
while and then insisted that she repeat her story to her jailor,
Mr. Starke, the following day.
Jane told Mr. Starke that she had returned to
her husband’s bed in order to establish an alibi. Jane said she
left her sleeping husband a little before dawn and she, “procured
the broad edged hatchet, entered the house, proceeded to Mr.
Winston’s room and commenced her fiendish labors by knocking Mr.
Winston senseless. He scarcely struggled. On leaving him she
stepped around the bed and commenced cutting into the head of Mrs.
Winston. Mrs. W’s struggles were so great that Jane said she
inflicted stronger and more frequent blows upon her head than she
did on Mr. W’s in order to silence her quickly. She then killed
the infant, washed off the blood, and laid it in the cradle. She
then washed the blood off the hatchet, hid it, and then gave the
alarm. Jane further stated that she considered she had been
ill-treated by Mr. and Mrs. Winston, and had been brooding over
her bloody revenge for some time. The devil, she stated, had such
possession of her that morning, that she believed she could have
went further if necessary.”
The anonymous pamphleteer who set forth the
details of Jane Williams’ case felt it was necessary to interject
the following parenthetical editorial at this point, “It is
notorious with all who were acquainted with Mr. Winston and his
wife, that John and Jane Williams, and all the negroes of the
family of the family of Mr. W., were the most indulged in the city
of Richmond. To promote the happiness of John and his wife, he
bought him in South Carolina, where he had been sold to traders,
and brought him back to Virginia. How the kindness of Mr. W. was
returned, the murderous conduct of Jane and John testifies,
Inhumanly butchering those who had been kind and forgiving to
them, and crushing the skull of their innocent child, so that the
Physician said, that when he pressed the head to discover its
injuries, he heard the broken pieces of bone grating against each
other.”
At her trial Jane pleaded guilty and stated
that she had acted alone. She was sentenced to be hanged on
Friday, September 12, 1852. At her execution, “The gallows was
erected a short distance south east of the Poor House, on the side
of the hill near the powder magazine, appropriate to the purpose
of a grave yard for blacks.” Jane met with the Reverend Dr.
Ryland, who “gave her some practical advice.”
“At 10 o’clock she was taken from jail in an
open four-horse wagon, her minister at her side. She was dressed
entirely in white, and was guarded by the city Sergeant, Mr.
Ferguson, his deputy, Mr. Starke, Constable, and a special
detachment of the night police, commanded by Mr. Jenkins. An
immense concord of people surrounded the procession. On arriving
at the ground, the wagon was halted under the common scaffold
erected to hang Jordan Hatcher. – Dr. Ryland then addressed the
immense multitude, comprising upwards of six thousand persons of
all sexes, colors, and ages, stating that he should then, in
accordance with the promises of the gospel, administer the
consolation of religion to Jane in her dying moments, although he
must say that if she had three lives instead of one, they should
all be taken to pay the penalty of her wicked and bloody deeds. He
then offered up a fervent prayer to Deity on her behalf. Never
before, perhaps, did religious ceremonies of so serious and
impressive character, fall upon more unwilling ears. The thick
crowding thoughts of the diabolical murder of two innocent,
guiltless, beings committed by Jane, with the coolness and
deliberation of a fiend, rendered unimpressive, cold, and tedious,
those ceremonies.
“Jane continued kneeling some time after the
prayer had concluded. Dr. R. then asked Jane whether anyone beside
herself was cognizant of, or accessory to, the murder. Her calm
reply was, “no one,” – This, while entering the embrace of death,
she denied positively that any person aided her in committing the
murder.
“The halter was then adjusted to the crossbeam
of the gallows, which was about 18 feet high. She tied the hood
under her neck, and stepped upon the chair from whence she was to
be launched into eternity, without moving a muscle or evincing and
trepidation. The word was given, the chair was pulled from under
her, and the cart moved off, leaving her hanging in the air at a
distance of a few feet off the ground. The fall was about twenty
inches. The knot of the noose slipped to the back part of the
neck, so that she apparently died of strangulation, though Dr.
Haskins, we were informed by Mr. Starke, stated that the fall
broke her neck. She kicked convulsively for several minutes at 14
minutes to 11 the drop fell; at 17 minutes after 11, Dr. H.
pronounced that she had been dead for some minutes and she was cut
down. She was interred in a grave dug near the scaffold under the
hill. And thus ended the career of one of the vilest wretches that
ever disgraced humanity.”
On the Sunday after Jane’s execution two
religious services were held. At the African Baptist Church the
Reverend Dr. Ryland instructed the enslaved congregation to remain
calm and do no harm to their Masters. He warned them if rumors of
unrest persisted they would no longer be allowed to congregate and
enjoy the solace of religion. Across town, at the Church the
Winston family attended, a memorial service was held for Virginia
Winston and her infant daughter. At this service the Reverend Mr.
Moore placed the blame on this awful crime at the door of the
perceived breakdown of strong, traditional, family values.
Jane’s husband, John, was brought to trial for
his life after the execution of his wife. Although Jane denied
John’s involvement when she gave her confession, then again at
trial, and finally, when she stood on the scaffold facing death,
he was found guilty on the basis of the testimony that he had
words with Overseers who hired him from the Winstons, and that he
was sometimes seen lurking, although not on the day in question.
John Williams was hanged October 22, 1852. Although the evidence
linking John to the crime seems slight, our anonymous pamphleteer
assures us that if we could have been in the courtroom and
listened to the testimony and observed the demeanor of the accused
there would be no doubt in our minds to his guilt.
The survivor, Joseph Winston, was awarded
$500.00 by the Commonwealth of Virginia for his economic loss
associated with Jane’s execution and an additional sum of $850.00
for her husband, John.