The
trial of James Howard Snook was one of the most celebrated Columbus
courtroom dramas of this century. During the summer of 1929, Dr. Snook,
a professor of veterinary medicine at The Ohio State University, was
tried and convicted for the slaying of Theora Hix, an OSU medical
student. During the course of the three-week trial, witnesses and
Snook himself took the stand revealing events and actions so sexually
explicit that they couldn't be published in any newspaper, especially
in conservative Columbus, Ohio. Details of Snook's lurid and explicit
testimony were not printed in any of Columbus' three newspapers.
However, an enterprising court stenographer compiled an uncensored
account of the testimony and published it later that summer. It was
seized from newsstands by angry protesters and Columbus police. The
material contained in this article has been compiled largely from that
banished courtroom testimony, The Murder of Theora Hix and Trial
of Dr. James H. Snook.
Dr.
Snook was married with a young daughter, and for part of the
relationship, Miss Hix had another lover, a recent graduate of OSU.
Snook and Hix engaged in a three-year love affair prior to the murder,
and many of their clandestine meetings were held at a rented "love
nest" in a rooming house at 24 Hubbard Avenue in the Short North. The
details of their affair and the events that occurred the night of the
murder are still shocking – even to today's readers, who, if these
events had occurred in the very recent past, might view them as
casually as they do the drama of TV talk shows and newsstand tabloids.
By
modern standards, the trial of Dr. Snook would certainly have been
given more careful and judicious treatment than it was in 1929. The
trial was held in a Columbus courtroom, and jurors were selected in a
questionable fashion. Most of the 14 (12 jurors, two alternates) were
residents of the Columbus area, and there were only two initial jurors
who were women. Eventually, one of the women was disqualified from
duty because of a conversation she had with one of Snook's attorneys,
rendering the jury vastly out of balance in terms of gender.
Furthermore, the whole city was abuzz with news of the scandal – an
objective climate it was not. The jurors that would eventually convict
Dr. Snook of the murder were comprised of farmers, a blacksmith, and
one woman. Furthermore, Snook's confession probably would have been
considered coerced, and Snook himself rescinded his own confession
during the course of the trial. However, his own frank testimony was
probably the primary factor leading to his conviction and eventual
execution for the crime.
Theora Hix was a 22-year-old medical student at Ohio State University,
working as a stenographer at the public office in the OSU veterinary
building when she and Dr. Snook first met in June of 1926. Snook was a
respected member of the veterinary school's faculty and a licensed
veterinarian. He was well-known in the community outside of university
social circles, and a member of the United States pistol team of 1920,
winners at the Antwerp, Belgium Olympics. Snook was 45 years old and
four years married when he began his affair with Hix. He and his wife
Helen and their young daughter lived on East 10th Avenue near the
university campus. He was a member of the Scioto Country Club and was
described as "a fine veterinarian . . . a very fine man . . . a good
neighbor."
During the summer of 1926, Snook and Hix began their ill-fated
relationship with short conversations which eventually led to Snook
offering Hix a ride to her Mack Hall dormitory. The rides to Mack Hall
were short, and became more frequent as the days passed. The two began
to take long rides in the country, and within three weeks of their
acquaintance, they became lovers. Theora told the doctor that she was
more knowledgeable about sexual matters than he was, and that he'd
better "read up" about the subject. She offered titles of several
books such as The Art of Love, a book written by a physician,
for Snook to study, and he did.
During the following months of 1926 and early 1927, the two trysted at
a Main Street rooming house, with Snook eventually renting a room
there so they could have a permanent meeting place, getting together
two or three times a week, usually between the hours of 6 and 9 p.m.
Helen Snook would later testify that she had no idea what her husband
was up to, and during the trial, defended him to the bitter end.
Theora, on the other hand, was moody and often disagreeable, telling
Snook that her other lover, Marion Meyers' sexual superiority and
greater penis size gave her much more pleasure than the doctor did.
The doctor himself admitted that the relationship was mainly physical,
that neither he nor Hix cared deeply for one another. "We didn't love
each other . . . we satisfied each other's needs," he would testify in
court. Hix, aside from being demanding of his time and somewhat
petulant about Snook's need to fulfill family obligations, often used
drugs such as cannabis indica, a narcotic, and another aphrodisiac
commonly known as "Spanish Fly" or cantheris vesicatioria. Both
substances were available to Dr. Snook in the veterinary drug room and
were not prohibited for sale. Furthermore, they were present in
virtually all medical centers at that time. Hix was convinced that she
had an underactive thyroid, and also took thyroid extracts and
thyroxin not only to remedy that problem, but as an aphrodisiac. She
urged Snook to ingest some of it, and he did. Hix also consumed
several other substances while the two were together: strophine
sulphate, cocaine (which she once injected to remove a splinter),
veronal, and barbital.
Hix
had a slightly sado-masochistic bent and strongly urged Dr. Snook to
comply with her sexual preferences. He did, and from his testimony
during the trial, it is safe to assume that Hix called the shots in
the relationship. Hix was a strapping girl; about 5'7" tall and 145
pound. More than once she said that she told Snook that she could
defend herself against any man of similar stature. Hix's physical
aggressiveness and sadistic behavior culminated the night of her
murder, her behavior becoming so extreme that the doctor literally had
to fight her off.
Snook
had been described as a mild-mannered person, and during the course of
his arrest and trial, cooperated with city officials seemingly without
protest. He did, however, say that his confession was coerced by
prosecutors and police, and claimed that one city prosecutor, Jack
Chester, slapped him several times across the face while Snook was at
the County Jail being questioned. He asserted that Chester, a young,
ambitious attorney, struck him, saying "Damn you, go ahead and tell
the story; you have got to tell it; we know that you know more and you
must tell it." Police Chief Harry French verified that Snook had been
slapped and that his only reply was, "Now, Mr. Chester, don't resort
to that; don't resort to that." Later that day, when Snook was
returned to police headquarters for further questioning, he confessed
to the murder. The grilling lasted from 10 a.m. June 20 to 5 a.m. June
21st, with a few short breaks.
Hix's
other boyfriend, Marion Meyers, was also taken in for questioning the
day after the murder. Meyers' alibi checked out and he was released
after identifying the body at the mortuary. His affair with Theora had
ended over a year prior to the murder, and at that time he was engaged
to another woman.
Helen
Snook was also questioned. Prosecutors claimed she was suspect because
of some hair samples found in the corpse's hand, but it was eventually
determined that she had no knowledge of the affair and she was
released. The hair samples turned out to be Hix's own hair.
Snook
hired attorneys John F. Seidel, a former Columbus municipal judge, and
E. O. Ricketts. They were joined at the trial by Max Seyfert of
Circleville. Snook assured Seidel that he was innocent, causing Seidel
to make a statement to the press that would later haunt him. "If Dr.
Snook killed that girl, I helped him do it." Snook's attorneys rallied
for a postponement of the trial, but could only manage to have the
opening date pushed back two days. So on July 24, 1929, Dr. Snook was
brought to Courtroom I for opening arguments. The courtroom was packed
to capacity with 200 people, some of whom had waited in line for hours
to get a seat. Theora Hix's parents were seated in the front row. They
had come from Florida for the trial and appeared "old, tired and
pathetic." (Quote from More Columbus Unforgettables, Vol. 2.)
Three long tables had been placed across one end of the courtroom for
the 40 members of the press who were covering the trial. Reporters
from all of the Columbus and area newspapers were present, joined by
famed reporter James L. Kilgallen of the International News Service,
and Morris DeHaven Tracy (author of the first book on Col. Charles
Lindbergh) of the United Press Association.
The
testimony that was presented during the course of the trial would send
waves of shock, indignation, and disgust throughout Columbus. One
author stated, "If (this trial) had been a movie, it would have been a
blockbuster."
*****
(From the October 1999 Issue)
Part II
As
chronicled in last month's issue, the trial of Dr. James Howard Snook
was one of the most sordid and infamous courtroom dramas of this
century. During the summer of 1929, Dr. Snook, a prominent faculty
member of the OSU School of Veterinary Medicine, was tried and
convicted for the murder of Theora Hix, a 25-year-old medical student
at OSU, with whom Snook had engaged in a three-year affair.
As
the last article points out, at the time of the trial, no newspaper
would carry any of the explicit material included in the testimony of
the Snook trial. Harry Franken states in the book More Columbus
Unforgettables that "the term 'unforgettable' is an apt one for
the trial of Dr. James Howard Snook for the slaying of Theora Kathleen
Hix. More than fifty years after it happened, attorneys still discuss
the case."
The
story of the trial began with a small paragraph in The Columbus
Citizen dated June 14, 1929, the day after the murder: FIND
WOMAN'S BODY: Police were called Friday afternoon to the rifle range
on Fisher Road near McKinley Avenue, where the body of a woman was
found by boys. An arm was said to be missing. Coroner Murphy was
called.
That
small article would be the first of many articles and stories
surrounding the case, and although the part about the arm being
missing turned out to be incorrect, many other seedy details were
exposed about the death of Theora Hix during the trial and months that
followed.
Two
16-year-old boys, Paul Krumlauf and Milton Miller, both of the north
campus area, drove Miller's Whippet Four sedan to the rifle range on
June 14, where they found Hix's body. They hurried to the old police
headquarters on Sullivant Avenue immediately after the grisly
discovery. Meanwhile, Beatrice and Alice Bustin had filed a missing
person report on Hix, their roommate at 1658 Neil Avenue. Later that
day, they would identify Hix's body as the one found at the rifle
range at the Glenn L. Myers mortuary on Second Avenue.
Although Theora's roommates identified several people as Hix's "boyfriends,"
it was Mrs. Margaret Smalley, a woman who managed a number of Columbus
rental rooms, who recognized Snook's picture in The Columbus
Dispatch and told police he was the man who rented a room at her
24 Hubbard Avenue rooming house. Smalley told officials that Snook
identified himself as Howard Snook, a salt salesman, and that Hix was
his young wife. The room would be subsequently referred to as the
infamous "love nest" where most of the couple's meetings occurred.
The
proceedings of the Snook trial lasted less than a month, but during
that time hundreds of individuals waited outside the courtroom, which
was packed every day, in hope of hearing some of the sordid testimony
first-hand. Some people waited from 3:00 am on the street in front of
the courthouse, hankering for a good seat when the room opened later
in the morning.
Attorney Jack Chester, Jr. prosecuted the case and called a total of
21 witnesses, including Dr. Joseph A. Murphy, the Franklin County
Coroner, who testified that he found several hammer blows to the
victim's head, one of which had driven particles of bone into her
brain. However, he reported the cause of death was the severing of the
jugular vein and carotid artery. Dr. Murphy noted that the method by
which the vein and artery were severed appeared to have been done by
someone who was knowledgeable and experienced in anatomy.
Murphy also removed Miss Hix's stomach and took it to a chemist for
examination. The chemist and his assistants testified that they found
"a beef sandwich, a small piece of brown paper, four cucumber seeds,
some strawberry seeds, a green material determined to be Spanish Fly (an
aphrodisiac that Hix was fond of taking), and cannabis indica, a
narcotic.
Further forensic examination of Snook's clothing found human blood (later
determined to be Hix's). The same blood was found in Snook's car along
with his pocket knife and a hammer. Snook had lied to detectives early
in their investigation, claiming he had not had his car cleaned the
day after the murder. It was later determined by testimony for the
prosecution that Snook had paid a man to clean his car thoroughly that
day. Apparently the cleaning job wasn't thorough enough.
The
defense called a total of 42 witnesses, two of whom were Dr. Snook's
wife and mother, whose weepy, pathetic testimonies moved many (including
Snook) to tears. Helen Snook, the doctor's wife, claimed her husband
was a peaceful and quiet man, and that she had never seen him angry.
She also emotionally stated that she was unaware of her husband's
affair until his arrest and admission less than a month earlier.
Snook's mother recalled with pride her young son's desire to stay to
himself, reading and studying animals rather than running around with
the rest of the neighborhood boys. When she left the stand, mother and
son embraced and sobbed for what one reporter noted "seemed like an
eternity."
When
Snook finally took the stand, he revealed that Miss Hix had showed him
more about sex than he had known before and that she told him he
should "read up on the subject." He also recounted a story that Hix
had told him about one of her previous affairs. She and Marion Meyers,
then a student at OSU, had been caught having sex along the Scioto
River by the police and were fined $20 each. She had lied about her
identity and address to the arresting officer and the justice of the
peace.
Snook
went on to say that he had taught Hix to shoot at the very same rifle
range on Fisher Road where her body was found. She was described as "a
decent shot," but witnesses who had seen her there thought she was in
the company of another man, not Snook.
The
three-year affair was tumultuous, Snook testified, with Hix becoming
more and more discontented with "conventional sex" and more demanding
of Snook's time. She introduced him to the use of various drugs and to
the act of fellatio, which he stated she performed on him about ten
times. He related that, on the night of the murder, he met Hix on High
Street near the campus and they drove to a remote area of the Scioto
Country Club to make love. He stated that Miss Hix deemed the spot
unsuitable, explaining "I would like to go someplace further where I
can scream."
Snook
said they then drove out Lane Avenue to the river road (Riverside
Drive), left to the Gloria Barbecue, then across the river bridge to
McKinley Avenue, north to Fisher Road and then into the rifle range.
He and Hix tried to have sex in the tiny car but decided that it was "unsatisfactory
for both of us." Afterwards, when he mentioned he wanted to leave
because he needed to prepare for a trip out of town with his family,
Hix became enraged. Snook told her he was taking his family to his
mother's home for the weekend, and Hix replied, "Damn your mother. I
don't care about your mother. Damn Mrs. Snook. I'm going to kill her
and get her out of the way." At this point in the testimony, Dr. Snook
began to cry, saying that Hix continued to threaten his family, even
going so far as to say she would kill his young daughter as well.
After
Snook was allowed to collect himself, he continued: "She said, 'You
have got to help me out.' She grabbed open my trousers and went down
on me then, and she didn't do it very nicely and she bit me and got
hold of my privates and pulled so hard I simply could not stand it. I
got hold of something out of this kit (in the back seat of the car)
and hit her with it. I finally got her loose, very nearly twisted her
arm off and she sat up there a little bit and said, 'Damn you, I will
kill you, too.'
"She
grabbed her purse and slid out of the (car.) I was in so much pain and
when I tried to straighten up, all at once it flashed through my mind
that she was getting out and I knew if she got out she would shoot me.
"I
hit her once then, I hit her again and she slid right out on the
ground and I followed her out. I got up behind her and hit her once
more with the hammer and she went down and her head hit against the
running board of the (car), and that is all I can remember of hitting
her." Snook said he had no recollection of stabbing her or slashing
her throat. He added on cross-examination by Chester, who made him go
into greater detail about his sexual activity with Hix, that he hadn't
mentioned it before because "I was ashamed of it, ashamed of any sex
perversion because I never knew anyone that would do that before."
None
of the local newspapers quoted any of this explicit testimony, but
reporter Pauline Smith of The CoIumbus Citizen wrote: "The
Snook trial devotees have been rewarded for their long hours of
standing in line and sitting in the stuffy courtroom. Thursday morning
they heard the dirt they have been looking for."
During the final arguments of the trial, Snook's wife and mother, who
had avoided the courtroom during Snook's own testimony, sat beside him
and held his hands. They remained beside him during Judge Scarlett's
charge to the jury, which surprised the gallery by returning with a
verdict in 28 minutes: "guilty of murder in the first degree as he
stands charged in the indictment." The trial ended August 14, 1929.
After
appeals through the U.S. Supreme Court failed, Snook was put to death
in the electric chair at the Ohio Penitentiary on West Spring Street
the evening of February 28, 1930. Following a short pre-dawn service
by Rev. Isaac Miller of the King Avenue Methodist Church, Snook was
given a private burial. |