Early life
Tom Dula was born to a poor Appalachian hill
country family in Wilkes County, North Carolina, most likely the
youngest of three brothers, with one younger sister, Eliza. The young
Dula grew up, attended school, and "probably played with the female
Fosters", Ann (later Melton), and Laura, her younger cousin. As the
children grew up, Tom and Ann apparently became intimate. Three months
before his eighteenth birthday, on 15 March 1862, he joined the
Confederate Army. Dula served as a private in Company K in the 42nd
North Carolina Infantry Regiment until the war ended in 1865.
Surprisingly, there is some evidence that Dula was literate, as
according to accounts at the time, he wrote a 15-page account of his
life, as well as the note that exonerated Ann Melton. His literacy is
highly unusual given his station in life, and the harsh poverty of his
upbringing.
Military service
Contrary to newspaper accounts at the time, Dula
did not serve in Zebulon Vance's 26th North Carolina. This also puts
the lie to the rumors that he “played the banjo” in the army band for
the Colonel's benefit, or that he entertained Colonel Vance with his
antics. These were often cited as the reason that the then-Governor
Vance leapt so quickly to lead the defense of Dula during his trial.
It seems more likely that Governor Vance simply believed in Dula's
innocence or thought that defending a Confederate veteran in the high-profile
case would be politically beneficial. Dula would not escape the war
completely unscathed, as folklore, oral tradition, and a few modern
writers have held. Instead he suffered various injuries throughout the
course of the fighting. Each of his brothers died in the war, leaving
Tom as his mother's “sole remaining boy."
The murder of Laura Foster
Upon returning from the war, Dula discovered that
Ann had married James Melton. Given his reputation as something of a
libertine, it did not take Dula long to take up with young Laura. She
became pregnant shortly thereafter, and she and Dula decided to elope.
On the night she was to meet Dula, about the 26th
of May, 1866, she left her home, never to be seen alive again. While
it is not known for certain what happened that evening, many of the
stories that have grown out of the folklore of the time implicate Ann
Melton in some way. Some believe that Ann may have murdered Laura
Foster because she was still in love with Dula and was jealous that
Laura was marrying him; others believe that perhaps Dula knew or
suspected that Ann had murdered Foster, but because he still loved Ann
he refused to implicate her after he was arrested and took the blame
for the murder. In fact, it was Ann's word that led to the discovery
of the girl's body. Foster had been stabbed multiple times with a
large knife. The gruesome nature of the murder, combined with the fact
that Laura Foster was pregnant when she was killed, captured the
public's attention, and led to the enduring notoriety of the crime.
The role of Dula in the slaying is unclear. He fled
shortly after her body was found– when he was declared a suspect–
working for a time for Colonel James Grayson, in Watauga County,
before taking refuge across the state line in Trade, Tennessee.
Grayson would enter folklore as a romantic rival of Dula's, but this
was not true. It was simply an incorrect inference drawn from the
lyrics of the song, and became more widespread as the facts of the
case were largely forgotten. Grayson did, however, help the Wilkes
County posse bring Dula in, once his identity was discovered.
Trial
After Dula was arrested, former North Carolina
Governor Zebulon Vance represented him pro bono, and maintained
Dula's innocence of the charges. He succeeded in having the trial
moved from Wilkesboro to Statesville, as it was widely believed that
Dula would not receive a fair trial in Wilkes County. Dula was
convicted and, although he was given a new trial on appeal, he was
convicted again. His supposed accomplice, Jack Keaton, was set free
and, on Dula's word, Melton was acquitted of the crime. As he stood on
the gallows facing his death, he is reported to have said, “Gentlemen,
do you see this hand? I didn’t harm a hair on the girl’s head”. He was
executed nearly two years after the murder of his fiancée, on 1 May
1868. His younger sister and her husband retrieved his body for burial
after the execution.
After the execution
In 2001, Tom Dula was "acquitted" of all charges
after a petition was sent around Wilkes County and to the county seat.
This action was unofficial and had no legal force.
Myths
Subsequently, much legend and folklore arose around
the tragedy and the life of Tom Dula. Not the least of these tales has
Dula surviving the war without a scratch, and Governor Zebulon Baird
Vance making use of Dula’s supposed talents with a banjo for his own
personal entertainment. Both Dula’s and Vance’s accounts, as well as
Dula’s own military record, show this legend to be untrue; it persists
nonetheless.
A popular myth holds that while Dula was fighting
in Virginia, Ann – apparently despairing of ever seeing Tom again –
met and married an older farmer, James Melton. In reality, Ann married
James Melton in 1859, three years before Tom left for the war, though
it's unclear whether or not that actually changed the nature of the
relationship between Tom and Ann.
In popular culture
A local poet named Thomas Land wrote a song about
the tragedy shortly after Dula was hanged. This, combined with the
widespread publicity the trial received, further cemented Dula’s place
in North Carolina legend. The song written by Land is still sung today
throughout North Carolina.
Several recordings were made of the song in the
twentieth century, with the first in 1929 by a group called “Grayson
and Whitter”. The most popular version was recorded by The Kingston
Trio in 1958. It sold over 6 million copies, is widely credited with
starting the “folk boom” of this time period, and was named by the
Grammy Foundation as one of the Songs of the Century.
The Trio's song was covered in Great Britain by
Lonnie Donegan later in 1958.
In 1959, Michael Landon was given the role of Dula
in the movie The Legend of Tom Dooley. The movie was not based
on the facts of Dula’s life, except in the very loosest sense, and
neither was it based on any traditional Tom Dula legends. It was
rather a fictional treatment inspired by the lyrics of the song.
Also in 1959, Stonewall Jackson's U.S. country
music and Billboard hit song Waterloo makes reference to Tom Dooley in
the final verse.
The members of Macabre, known for their death metal
style also put out an album of acoustic folk songs, among them is a
song entitled Tom Dooley, about his death.
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