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Floyd
ALLEN
Same day
Virginia on March 28, 1913
He was accused with triggering the shooting at
the Carroll County Courthouse in Hillsville, Virginia on March 14,
1912, in which five people were killed and seven wounded. The
affair represents one of the rare incidents in American history
when a criminal defendant attempted to avoid justice by
assassinating the trial judge.
Earli Life and Activity
Allen was born in 1856 and spent much of his
life living in Cana, below Fancy Gap Mountain in Carroll County,
Virginia. Floyd Allen was the chief patriarch of Carroll County's
leading family, which in addition to owning large tracts of
farmland and a prosperous general store, were also active in local
politics, illegal liquor manufacture, and bootlegging. A fixture
of the community, Floyd Allen was noted for his generosity, quick
temper, and easily-injured pride.
The Allens were proud Democrats and were active
in local politics in Carroll County. As a result many of the
Allens held local offices such as constable, deputy sheriff, tax
collector, or deputy sheriff, and supported various political
friends for office.
Floyd had a history of violent altercations,
including shooting a man in North Carolina, beating up a police
officer in Mount Airy, and later shooting his own cousin. In May
1889, Floyd's brothers, Garland and Sidna Allen, were tried for
carrying concealed pistols and assaulting a group of thirteen men.
In July 1889 the Carroll County court indicted
Floyd for assault as well, but in December of that year the
Commonwealth's Attorney dropped the case. In September 1889, after
pleading no contest to the assault, Garland and Sidna were fined
$5 each plus court costs, and the prosecutor dropped the weapons
charges.
Judge Robert C. Jackson, an attorney in Roanoke
and Judge Thornton Massie's predecessor in the Carroll County
courtroom, stated that "Floyd Allen was perhaps the worst man of
the clan--overbearing, vindictive, high tempered, brutal, with no
respect for law and little or no regard for human life. During my
term of office Floyd Allen was several times charged with
violations of law. In several instances he escaped indictment, I
am satisfied, because the witnesses were afraid to testify to the
facts before the grand jury."
Judge Jackson recalled a trial in 1904 in which
Floyd was convicted of assaulting a neighbor, Noah Combs. That
year,Floyd wanted to buy a farm owned by one of his brothers, but
could not agree on a price. Noah Combs wanted the land badly
enough to pay the asking price and bought it despite Floyd’s
warnings not to “butt in.” Not long afterward Floyd shot Combs
(who recovered), and was indicted and tried on charges of assault.
Sentenced by the jury to an hour in jail and a $100 fine, plus
costs, Floyd immediately posted bail pending an appeal. His
defense team included former Commonwealth's Attorney Walter Tipton
and recent County Court Judge Oglesby. At the next term of court,
Floyd produced a pardon from Governor Andrew J. Montague
suspending the jail sentence.
In another instance, arguing over the
administration of their father's estate, Floyd Allen got into a
gunfight with his own brother, Jasper (Jack) Allen, a local
constable. In a fusillade of shots, Floyd hit Jack in the head,
which struck a glancing blow on Jack's scalp, while one of Jack's
bullets hit Floyd in the chest. His pistol empty, Floyd proceeded
to beat Jack with the butt of his empty revolver. Sentenced to a
$100 fine and one hour in jail for wounding his cousin, Floyd
refused to go, saying that he "would never spend a minute in jail
as long as the blood flowed through his veins". Floyd's body bore
the scars of thirteen bullet wounds, five of them inflicted in
quarrels with his own family.
Despite their history of violence, the Allens
held considerable political power, and Floyd had a reputation for
courage. In 1908, while serving as special deputies, Floyd and
H.C. (Henry) Allen, a relative of Floyd, were charged with
unlawful assault upon prisoners held in their custody who had
reportedly resisted arrest. On February 1, 1908 the Allens were
convicted of the charge and sentenced to ten days in jail and a
fine of $10. Only a month later, their petition for executive
clemency was granted by Governor Claude A. Swanson, restoring
their political rights to hold office.
In 1910 Sidna Allen, Floyd's brother, was tried
in the United States court at Greensboro, N. C., for making
twenty-dollar counterfeit coins. The federal court in Greensboro,
North Carolina found him not guilty, while Sidna's alleged
accomplice, Preston Dickens, was found guilty and sentenced to
serve five years in federal prison. Sidna was retried and found
guilty of perjury in his trial testimony, and was sentenced to two
years' imprisonment. Sidna promptly appealed and gained a new
trial on the perjury charge. The next year, after the Allens
complained that they could not expect justice from William Foster,
the Republican Commonwealth Attorney of the county (who had
recently switched parties), Judge Thornton L. Massie had appointed
both Floyd and H. C. (Henry) Allen to the post of police officer
for the New River section of the county.
However, times were changing. Virginia's
judicial structure was altered in a series of legal reforms,
particularly the county court system, which was replaced by
circuit courts. The new system appointed a full-time judge to hold
court at scheduled intervals in a circuit of several counties.
While the state legislature still appointed circuit judges, the
new system reduced the ability of individual delegates to ensure
that their own preferred judge was selected for their particular
county. Furthermore, Judges could no longer practice law for
private clients while on the bench, and as regional judges their
susceptibility to local influence and public opinion was reduced.
At a church service the next morning conducted
by Wesley Edwards' uncle, Garland Allen, Will Thomas reportedly
called out Wesley Edwards into a fight. According to Wesley
Edwards, Thomas and three friends assaulted him and he defended
himself with the help of his brother Sidna, who rushed to join the
fight.
Following a complaint lodged by Wesley Edwards'
father, George, Wesley and his brother Sidna Edwards were charged
with disorderly conduct, assault with a deadly weapon, disturbing
a public worship service, and other violations. Rather than face
arrest, the two men fled over the state line to Mt. Airy in Surry
County, North Carolina, where they found jobs in a granite quarry.
The Deputy Clerk of Carroll County, Dexter Goad, obtained a new
warrant for the brothers' arrest, notifying the sheriff in Surry
County, who soon arrested both men. Deputy Clerk Goad then sent a
deputy (Thomas F. Samuel) with a driver (Peter Easter) to the
North Carolina border to receive the Edwards brothers.
Upon reaching the state line, Deputy Thomas F.
Samuel and Peter Easter traveled in Easter's four-seater buggy to
the state line and received the Edwards boys from Sheriff Haynes
and Deputy Oscar Monday, who had arrested the brothers at work.
There was only one set of handcuffs, and because Sidna Edwards had
tried to escape a couple of times, Wesley was handcuffed in the
front seat of the buggy beside Easter and Sidna was tied in the
back seat beside Samuel.
On the way to the courthouse, the buggy passed
by several properties owned by the Allens. Floyd Allen met the
buggy south of Sidna Allen's home as he was on the way to his own
home. Deputy Samuel pulled a gun (later determined to be
inoperative) and ordered Floyd to move away, and Floyd rode back
past the buggy to Sidna's store where he then blocked the narrow
road with his mare. Samuel again pulled his gun on Floyd. A fight
ensued and Floyd beat Samuel with his own pistol. Wesley Edwards
tried to grapple with Easter, but Easter got away and fired a shot
at Floyd as he did so, wounding Floyd in the finger. Floyd then
released the Edwards brothers. Easter escaped on foot to the home
of an acquaintance, where he telephoned the sheriff at Hillsville.
Deputy Samuel was left lying unconscious in a ditch, and his
horses were run off.
Floyd Allen later stated that he never intended
to have the boys set completely free, he just wanted them to be
released from their manacles and treated as humans instead of
animals. Some say that the boys were not only manacled but being
dragged behind the buggy.
On the following Monday, Wesley and Sidna
Edwards were turned over to the court by Floyd Allen, and the two
Edwards brothers were soon tried and convicted of their crimes.
Wesley was sentenced to sixty days and his brother thirty, which
were served outside jail on work-release. Floyd Allen, Sidna
Allen, and Barnett Allen were all indicted for interfering with
the deputies, and Floyd Allen was indicted for assault and
battery. Sidna Allen was never tried for his part in the
altercation, while Barnett was tried and acquitted. Floyd Allen's
case was set for trial.
Shortly before trial, a rumor that the Allens
were intimidating witnesses was called to the attention of the
court. Judge Massie called Constable Jack Allen and Floyd Allen to
the bar and proceeded to question them about the alleged
intimidation. Jack Allen denied all responsibility for the
allegations of intimidation, which he stated were not true and
both he and Floyd were not guilty of any wrongdoing. In response,
the judge told the two men that if the law could not be enforced
in Carroll County by the county officers (meaning Jack and Floyd)
that he would get rid of the officers and bring in state troops if
necessary to maintain order. A witness later testified that Floyd
Allen had remarked that he "would not let any man talk to me that
way."
Trial and shooting
After close to a year of delays, Floyd was
finally brought to trial on March 13, 1912. The trial was presided
over by Judge Thornton L. Massie, the same judge who had appointed
Floyd to the post of county police officer six months before.
Floyd Allen was well represented by a team of two attorneys,
Walter Scott Tipton and David Winton Bolen, both of whom were
retired Carroll County judges.
Rumors arose in the community that Floyd Allen
had reportedly sent word to Deputy Samuel that he would kill
Samuel if the deputy testified against him. Allen later denied
this, but the threat, whoever sent it, was sufficient to cause
Deputy Samuel to leave the state the same night the threat was
delivered.
Samuel's departure forced the state's
Commonwealth's Attorney (prosecutor) William M. Foster to rely on
testimony from Deputy Easter. Foster had been Commonwealth’s
Attorney of Carroll County for eight years, having been first
elected on the Democratic ticket. Later, he changed to the
Republican party, and by 1912 was a prominent leader in the GOP in
Carroll County, being elected the last time on the Republican
ticket. Foster was a political enemy of the Allens, as they had
supported Constable Jack Allen's son Walter as Democratic
candidate for Commonwealth's Attorney against Foster in the last
election last (Walter had lost in a bitterly-fought race). In the
grand jury testimony, Floyd Allen admitted 'roughing up' Samuel,
but not with the intent of releasing the prisoners: "That there
Samuel[s] was abusing the boys. He had them handcuffed and tied up
with a rope. I just can't bear to see anyone drug around."
Fearful of the Allens' reaction, and having
received death threats, many officials of the court armed
themselves. At least two of the participants, Judge Massie and
Sheriff Webb, had told friends that they expected trouble. There
were many of the Allen clan among the spectators in the courtroom,
most of them armed with pistols. Sidna Allen and Claud Allen were
in the northeast corner of the courtroom, standing on benches to
see over the crowd. Friel Allen sat in the back of the room, and
the Edwards boys stood on benches next to the north wall. When the
jury returned a guilty verdict against Floyd, sentencing him to
one year in the penitentiary, Floyd Allen is reported to have said
to Judge Massie: "If you sentence me on that verdict, I will kill
you." Judge Massie at once proceeded to sentence Floyd to one
years' imprisonment.
According to Floyd Allen's defense attorney,
David Winton Bolen, "[Floyd] hesitated a moment, and then he
arose...He looked to me like a man who was about to say something,
and had hardly made up his mind what he was going to say, but as
he got straight, he moved off to my left, I would say five or six
feet, and he seemed to gain his speech, and he said something like
this, 'I just tell you, I ain't a'going.'" At this point, shots
broke out in the courtroom.
Accounts differ as to who actually fired the
first shot. Many accounts claim that Allen initiated the
confrontation by pulling a gun in court. In his defense testimony,
Floyd Allen stated that Sheriff Lew F. Webb fired first, but that
the shot missed Allen, at which point Deputy Clerk Goad, the Clerk
of Court, fired and hit Allen, causing him to fall. (When Floyd
fell, wounded, he landed on top of his lawyer David Bolen, who is
reported to have said, “Floyd, they are going to kill me shooting
at you!”) Floyd Allen stated that only then did he draw his own
revolver and begin shooting. After a fusillade of shots, the Allen
clan left the courthouse, armed with both pistols and 12-gauge
pump shotguns, and shooting as they ran.
Judge Massie, Sheriff Webb, Commonwealth's
Attorney Foster, the jury foreman (Augustus C. Fowler), and a
nineteen-year old girl (Elizabeth Ayers) were all hit and died of
their wounds sustained in the crossfire. More than fifty bullets
were later recovered from the shooting scene. Elizabeth Ayers, a
subpoenaed witness who had testified against Floyd Allen, was shot
in the back while trying to leave the courtroom, and died the next
day. Seven others were wounded, including Deputy Clerk Goad and
Floyd Allen. Floyd, wounded too badly in the hip, thigh and knee
to leave town, instead spent the night in the Elliott Hotel
accompanied by his eldest son, Victor, who was later found not to
have been involved in the shootout. Upon his arrest by deputies at
the hotel, Floyd attempted to slash his own throat with a
pocketknife, but was overpowered before he could complete the job.
Virginia law held that when a sheriff died his
deputies lost all legal powers, so Carroll County was left without
law enforcement by the shooting. Recognizing the need for
immediate action, Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney S. Floyd
Landreth sent a telegram to Democratic Governor William Hodges
Mann which read:
Send troops to the County of Carroll at once.
Mob violence, the court. Commonwealth's Attorney, Sheriff, some
jurors and others shot on the conviction of Floyd Allen for a
felony. Sheriff and Commonwealth's Attorney dead, court serious.
Look after this now.
Governor Mann immediately called on the
Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency to find those responsible for the
shootings and arrest them. Rewards ($1000 for Sidna Allen, $1000
for Sidna Edwards, $800 for Claude Allen, $500 for Friel Allen,
and $500 for Wesley Edwards) - dead or alive - were posted by the
State of Virginia. Within a month, all parties were in custody,
save for Sidna Allen and Wesley Edwards. A manhunt then commenced
for the remaining Allen fugitives, and several posses of
detectives and local deputies searched the surrounding
countryside. The U.S. Revenue Service sent an agent, Deputy Agent
Faddis, to investigate reports of illegal liquor trafficking by
the Allens. Agent Faddis and four men raided Floyd Allen's
property, seizing illegal stills and fifty gallons of moonshine.
Two more illegal stills were found at Sidna Edwards' house.
Claud Allen and Sidna Edwards were placed into
custody after a brief search. Friel Allen gave himself to
detectives in the company of his father Jack Allen, who was
apparently concerned his son might be killed while being
apprehended. However, Sidna Allen and his nephew Wesley Edwards
fled the state. After several months' chase, the two were located
by Baldwin-Felts detectives in Iowa after a tip from an informant.
Sidna Allen maintained until the end of his life that this
informant was Maude Iroller, Wesley's fiancee, who provided
information on the fugitives' location in exchange for $500 from
the detective agency. Others state that Miss Iroller’s father, who
had never approved of his daughter’s romance with Wesley Edwards,
tipped off the detectives that Maude was going to Des Moines to
marry him. Knowing the two men were now in Des Moines,
Baldwin-Felts detectives soon located the men, arrested them, and
returned them to Carroll County to stand trial.
Floyd Allen was the first to be brought to
trial on a charge of murdering Judge Massie, Sheriff Webb, and
Commonwealth's Attorney Foster. Judge W.R. Staples presided over
the courthouse shooting trials, which were prosecuted by State's
Attorney General Samuel W. Williams. The prosecutor's case was
based on the formation of a conspiracy by the Allens to kill the
trial judge, local law enforcement, and others who had wronged
them in the event of a guilty verdict. J. E. Kearn, a travelling
salesman from Roanoke, testified to having sold Sidna Allen a lot
of ammunition at the March term of the Hillsville court. He sold
the defendant 500 each of .32 and .38 caliber pistol cartridges
and 500 12-gauge shotgun shells.
There remains considerable dispute even today
over who fired the first shot. The prosecution attempted to show
that Floyd and Claud Allen prompted the gun battle by standing and
pulling their pistols and opening fire. One of the prosecution's
witnesses was none other than attorney Walter S. Tipton, who was
in the court at the time of the shooting, and was representing
Floyd Allen at the time. Tipton testified to seeing Claude Allen
in the court house and saw him with a pistol raised in both hands
as if he had just fired it. Looking at him the second time he
again saw Floyd with his pistol raised, and holding it in both
hands, saw Floyd Allen fire his pistol.
For their part, Floyd Allen and his relatives
claimed that it was Deputy Clerk Dexter Goad who fired first,
prompted by a long-standing vendetta he and Foster held against
the family. The defense next attempted to show that Deputy Clerk
Goad shot Elizabeth Ayers in his exchange of fire with the Allens,
a charge Goad denied. Years later, an allegation surfaced that
Deputy Clerk H.C. Quesinberry confessed on his deathbed to
starting the shooting; two men swore an affidavit to that effect
in 1967 (for which each man was reportedly paid $25.00). Others
hold that the hearsay affidavit, made years after the event
transpired, is worthless, and that Floyd Allen probably began the
shooting. Still others claim that Sheriff Webb accidentally
discharged his own revolver, instigating the fusillade.
Former judge David Winton Bolen, who had been
present during the shooting as one of Floyd Allen's defense
attorneys, was the first witness examined by the prosecution at
Floyd Allen's murder trial. Bolen had been standing next to Floyd
Allen, and was facing Judge Massie when the first shots struck the
judge's robes. Bolen testified that the first shot fired was by
Claud Allen, and that Claud Allen's pistol shot, together with a
second shot fired by Sidna Allen killed Judge Massie.
Yet another lawyer who witnessed the shooting,
W.A. Daugherty of Pikeville, stated that several young men were
standing on court benches at the back of the room firing their
pistols "like Custer's cavalrymen at the Little Big Horn".
In his testimony at his murder trial, Floyd
Allen admitted that he had fired at Deputy Clerk H.C. Quesinberry
and again twice more at other unknown persons once he had left the
courthouse.
Deputy Sheriff George W. Edwards, who became
the sheriff of Carroll County after Sheriff Webb's death, was a
deputy sheriff at the time of the shooting. He testified that in a
conversation with Floyd Allen just after he been indicted, Floyd
said that Commonwealth's Attorney Foster would not give him a
show; but that if he did not there would be a "big hole put in the
court house." The next witness was Sidney Towe, who largely
corroborated the testimony of Sheriff Edwards, his statements
being along the same line. On a different occasion, he heard Floyd
Allen make the same threat of putting the biggest hole in the
court house that any man ever had seen.
By his own admission in court, Deputy Clerk
Dexter Goad fired the second shot at Floyd, striking him in the
pelvis. His stated reason was that he thought Floyd's fumbling
with his sweater buttons was a prelude to drawing his pistol.
However, he denied firing the first shot in the fusillade. Though
wounded by four bullets himself, Goad recovered.
S. E. Gardner, a Hillsville undertaker who
prepared the body of Sheriff Webb for burial, testified that the
Sheriff was shot no less than five times. One bullet entered the
back and ranged upward, lodging directly under the collarbone. A
second shot entered the back about four inches lower, while a
third shot cut the sheriff across the chin. Another entered the
body at the cap of the left hip and passed through the abdomen.
The last and fifth shot went into the calf of the leg and when his
trousers were removed, a .32 caliber bullet was discovered.
Attorney Howard C. Gilmer, of Pulaski Virginia,
was at Hillsville Courthouse at the time of the sentencing. He was
in a room adjoining Judge Massie's courtroom when the shooting
broke out. Gilmer testified he heard two shots in quick
succession, after which there was a slight interval and then a
great volley of firing. He also testified that he saw the crowd
come out of the court house, and recognized Floyd and Sidna as the
last to leave the court room, both of them following and firing as
they backed out, apparently in response to fire coming from within
the courthouse. Gilmer stated he heard Floyd Allen say two or
three times, "I am shot, but I got the damn scoundrel."
County Treasurer J. B. Marshall testified that
when the shooting started he turned to escape the courthouse.
After getting down the steps he leaned against the window of his
office when two girls, Dora and Elizabeth Ayers, passed him. He
testified that one of the girls pointed out some of the Allens
leaving the court house, when Sidna Allen came toward him, pointed
his pistol toward him, and fired. Marshall then related that Sidna
Allen's bullet buried itself in the window about six inches above
his head. Marshall also testified before leaving the court room he
was standing near Sheriff Webb, but did not see any pistol in the
Sheriff's hand.
A witness to the courtroom shooting, Walter
Petty, also testified that the first shots were fired from the
northeast corner of the courtroom, where Claud Allen was standing,
and that he witnessed a pistol duel between Sidna Allen and Deputy
Clerk Dexter Goad.
At Claude Allen's trial for the murder of
Commonwealth's Attorney Foster, Judge David W. Bolen was again the
star witness for the prosecution. Judge Bolen confirmed his prior
testimony that he saw Claud Allen fire the first shot at Judge
Massie from the northeast corner of the court room, whereupon
Claud advanced in the direction of the court officers to where
Commonwealth's Attorney Foster was standing.
For his part, Claud Allen admitted to firing
his pistol while in the courtroom. Claud testified that he saw
Sidna Allen firing just about the time he saw Deputy Clerk Goad
fire.
According to Victor Allen, whose pistol was
used in the courthouse shooting, he saw Wesley Edwards from
outside the courtroom firing a revolver through the courthouse
window and over the heads of spectators just after the shooting
began, and later saw him run from the courthouse together with
Sidna Allen. Victor Allen also asserted that Claud's shooting must
have done with his gun, since Claud had taken possession of
Victor's handgun as the two were leaving their hotel in Hillsville
on the morning of the tragedy. Claud Allen verified this part of
Victor's testimony.
Sidna Edwards testified that he was not armed
the day of the shooting and that he did not like to carry guns.
Sidna Edwards denied firing a gun during the courthouse shootings,
and stated that he did not see who fired the first shot, but
thought that it came from the vicinity of Deputy Clerk Goad's
desk. Sidna Edwards had scalded his foot some years before and was
partially lame, and limped out of the courthouse, riding his
mother's horse back to his home.
Sidna Allen denied that he shot Judge Massie,
or that he fired at Commonwealth's Attorney Foster, Sheriff Webb,
or at Juror Fowler. Sidna claimed that when the shooting
commenced, he drew his own revolver and fired five times at Deputy
Clerk Goad and Deputy Sheriff Gillespie, for the reason that both
men were firing at him. After shooting five times he dropped to
his knees and reloaded his revolver. Sidna stated that when he
left the courthouse, Deputy Clerk Goad followed behind him,
shooting him through the left arm, the bullet lodging in his left
side. He stated that he fired back at Goad on the court house
steps, but denied shooting at Treasurer J. B. Marshall. After the
shooting Sidna stated that he went to Blankenship’s Livery Stable,
where he met the other members of the family, leaving Hillsville
in the company of Claude Allen, Wesley Edwards, and Sidna Edwards.
They did not travel the public roads, but returned to their homes
by traveling cross-country through the farm fields. Sidna Allen
later left the state in the company of Wesley Edwards, eventually
reaching Des Moines, Iowa.
Aftermath
Floyd Allen was tried for the first-degree
murder of Commonwealth's Attorney Foster. On May 18, 1912, Floyd
Allen was found guilty by the jury. His stoic exterior gone, Floyd
Allen wept freely as the verdict was read. In July 1912, after
three separate trials, Claud Allen was convicted of first-degree
murder for the killing of Commonwealth's Attorney Foster, and for
second-degree murder for the killing of Judge Massie.
For their roles in the shooting, Floyd and
Claude Allen were sentenced to death by electrocution. Sidna Allen
received a total of 35 years in prison for the voluntary
manslaughter of Commonwealth's Attorney Foster, and for
second-degree murder of Judge Massie. Sidna Allen also pled guilty
to second-degree murder for the shooting of Sheriff Webb, and was
sentenced to 18 years' imprisonment. Wesley Edwards drew nine
years for each count of murder for the slaying of Foster, Massie,
and Webb for a total of 27 years' imprisonment. Sidna Edwards pled
guilty in August 1912 to second-degree murder, and was sentenced
to 15 years in the penitentiary. Friel Allen was tried in August
1912 and after confessing to shooting Foster, was sentenced to 18
years in prison. Friel Allen and Sidna Edwards were pardoned by
Democratic Governor Elbert Lee Trinkle in 1922, while Sidna Allen
and Wesley Edwards were pardoned by Governor Trinkle in 1926.
Victor Allen and Barnett Allen were acquitted. Burden "Byrd"
Marion, a cousin and neighbor, had all charges against him
dropped. Accounts differ as to whether this was for a lack of
evidence, or because Marion became a state's witness and admitted
his role in aiding the Allens. Shortly after the Allen trials, law
enforcement officers found a still in an old house on Burden
Marion's farm, and he was arrested for making illegal liquor. He
was tried in federal court, found guilty, and sentenced to a year
in federal prison at Moundsville, West Virginia. He began his
sentence in August 1913, and died (officially) of pneumonia in
prison on November 25, 1913.
Allen's death sentence was deeply unpopular
with Allen supporters in the county, but many other residents were
shocked by the deaths of so many people over Floyd Allen's refusal
to serve a year in prison, and were not sympathetic. Governor
Mann, who had received death threats in the same handwriting as
the threats previously delivered to the trial judge, had to cut
short a trip to Pennsylvania after learning his Lieutenant
Governor, James Taylor Ellyson (1847–1919), had attempted to
commute the Allens' sentences in his absence, instigating a brief
constitutional power struggle between the two men. Governor Mann
refused a request to commute the death sentences to life
imprisonment, and Floyd Allen was electrocuted on March 28, 1913
at 1:20PM, with his son going to the electric chair eleven minutes
later.
After a public display of the bodies at Biyle’s
Funeral Parlor, the Allens were buried in the Wisler Cemetery in
Cana, Virginia. For years it was alleged that the men were buried
under a headstone that read in part, "Judicially Murdered By The
State Of Virginia Over The Protests Of More Than 100,000 Of Its
Citizens." However, photographic proof of this headstone
inscription has never surfaced, though hundreds of photos exist of
other items relating to the event, and despite a reward offered
for a photograph of the inscription.
The Carroll County prosecutor placed liens on
all property owned by Floyd and Sidna Allen for the heirs of the
victims. As a result of three wrongful death lawsuits by the
victims' estates and survivors, the property of Sidna and Floyd
Allen was confiscated and sold at auction, forcing Sidna Allen's
wife and two small daughters to live in rented quarters and work
at menial jobs until Sidna's pardon. Floyd Allen's son, Victor,
bought his father's house so that his mother would not have to
move. In 1921, however, he moved his family to Tabernacle, New
Jersey.
Floyd Allen's brother Jasper (Jack) Allen lost
his job as constable as a result of the Hillsville shooting, but
that did not end matters. On March 17, 1916, Jack Allen had
stopped for the night in a roadhouse near Mt. Airy, North Carolina
where he encountered Will McGraw, a moonshine hauler. A dispute
between McGraw and Jack Allen arose about the Hillsville tragedy
and during the confrontation McGraw drew a gun and shot Allen
twice, killing him on the spot. Jack Allen was buried near his
home in Carroll County, in the presence of a thousand mourners.
List
of the dead and wounded
Dead
Thornton Lemmon Massie, judge
Lewis Franklin Webb, Carroll County sheriff
William McDonald Foster, Commonwealth's
Attorney
Augustus Cezar Fowler, juror
Nancy Elizabeth Ayres, witness
Wounded
Floyd Allen, defendant
Sidna Allen, defendant
Dexter Goad, Clerk of Court
Christopher Columbus Cain, juror
Andrew T. Howlett, spectator
Elihue Clark Gillespie, Deputy
Stuart Worrell, spectator
Cultural impact
Both Claude and Sidna Allen were the subject of
ballads for their actions; Sidna was referred to as "Sidney". In
addition, Virginia State Senator Joseph T. Fitzpatrick reportedly
once wrote the screenplay for a film based on the case.
The Sidna Allen House still stands in Fancy
Gap, Virginia; it is listed on the National Register of Historic
Places.
Perhaps the hardest thing for an outsider to
understand is the frequently heard claim that the subject is dead.
“The Courthouse Massacre? Don’t nobody talk about that much any
more,” says the young workman in Druther’s Restaurant on Main
Street in Hillsville. Motioning with a French fry in the direction
of the Carroll County Courthouse, he continues, “When I was a
little boy there used to be groups to tour that old barn every
week. But nowadays the whole thing is pretty much forgotten, I’d
say.”
That was disappointing news. The Allen Clan’s
blazing courtroom shootout that left five dead earned
international headlines in 1912 and became the stuff of legend—and
violent controversy—for decades afterward. Only a few years ago
State Senator Joseph Fitzpatrick was planning a motion picture
based on the events that led to the electrocution of Floyd Allen
and his son Claud. Could it be that the topic was now pretty even
in Hillsville?
“But as long as you’re doing another story on
it, you may as well get it right,” the young man says. Smoothing
out a paper napkin, he proceeds to make a ballpoint diagram of the
courtroom as it was on that cold and wet March day 70 years and
seven months ago, complete with the positions of Judge Massie,
Sheriff Webb, Common-wealth’s Attorney Foster and Clerk of Court
Goad. “Now if you’ll just look at this, you’ll see that there was
no way Dexter Goad could have fired the first shot like the Allen
s claimed . . .”
This is a dead subject?
Folklorist Roddy Moore, director of the Blue
Ridge Institute at Ferrum College, believes the issue of the Allen
Clan’s shootout is still alive and kicking in Hillsville. “We are
familiar with the story, but we decided not to get into it.
There’s just too much controversy about it even today. Besides,”
Moore says, “it’s too hard to get people to speak on the record."
To those not born and raised in Carroll County,
it may seem incredible that fundamental issues of fact can be
raised about an event that was witnessed by over a hundred
spectators.
Nevertheless, the issue of just who fired the first shot in the
courtroom massacre is a live one yet. But if disagreement is still
festering, is it possible—seven decades later—to discover the
ultimate truth? Moore says, “All you can do is record both sides.”
So that’s what we’ll do.
The most important thing to remember about the
Allen family of Carroll County is that they were not your
standard-issue outlaws. Jeremiah Allen , born in 1818 and a Civil
War veteran, was a prominent landowner, farmer and local
officeholder. He was also, many claim, a big-time maker of
moonshine whiskey and brandy, or “blockade liquor,” as it was
known in Carroll County. He had a big family of seven boys and
three girls, most of whom did quite well by the standards of the
day. Of Jeremiah’s large brood, the most important to this story
are Floyd, Jasper (or “Jack”), Garland, Sidna (pronounced as
“Sidney”), and their sister Alvirtia, who married a man named
Jasper Edwards.
Jeremiah Allen and his sons were of a type that
is peculiarly American. Freed for generations from the social and
legal conventions of European society, the Allens cherished an
individuality that would have been inconceivable back in the
British Isles. The pioneer families who settled Virginia’s Blue
Ridge grew or made nearly all of life’s necessities. They learned
to depend only on themselves and a few close neighbors, and grew
up with a kind of freedom and self-confidence unknown to Europeans
of the same class. Government, to the Blue Ridge mountaineers, was
something to be tolerated grudgingly and suspiciously. The Federal
Government in far off Washington, D.C., received their theoretical
support, except when it made obviously ridiculous laws like those
taxing whiskey and brandy, which the mountaineers believed
themselves entirely justified in flouting.
The pioneer strain of radical independence
seemed to persist longer in the Allens than most of their
neighbors, side by side with a strong drive to get on in the
world. Floyd Allen, a farmer, storekeeper and part time
moonshiner, said on more than one occasion that he would “die and
to go hell” before he spent a minute behind bars. Sidna was a
successful storekeeper at Fancy Gap who had once gone adventuring
in Alaska and Hawaii, been tried for counterfeiting, and later
built the finest house in Carroll County. Garland was a respected
farmer, schoolteacher, and Primitive Baptist preacher, and Jack
Allen was a wealthy farmer and sawmill operator. Whatever else
they were, the Allens clearly were not the band of ignorant
hillbilly outlaws that some Northern newspaper accounts made them
out to be.
On the other hand, they were not a race of mild
country squires. One is struck, when reading accounts written by
the Allens or their defenders, by the numerous unsavory incidents
that have to be explained away. According to their claims Floyd’s
shooting of a black man in North Carolina was self-defense; Sidna
was unaware that his employee and close friend Preston Dickens was
using the plating machine Sidna ordered to counterfeit coins; it
was self-defense when Floyd shot a man in the leg in 1904; Floyd
got in a brawl with revenue officers because they got drunk and
abused his hospitality; Sidna’s nephews, Wesley and Sidna Edwards
were prosecuted for disturbing public worship because they were
not “members of a privileged clique.” All the Allens deny numerous
contemporary accounts alleging that Jeremiah and at least some of
his sons made blockade liquor. Some of the smoke may be slander,
but it is difficult not to suspect at least a little fire.
The train of events, which culminated in the
execution of Floyd and Claud Allen, began on a Saturday night in
the spring of 1911. Alvirtia Edwards’ 20-year-old son, Wesley, had
an argument with a man named Thomas at the local school. The
following day, when Wesley and his 22-year-old brother, Sidna,
were attending services at their uncle Garland Allen’s church,
Wesley was supposedly called out of the service and attacked by
Thomas and some friends. Sidna then rushed out of the church and
came to his brother’s aid. As a result of the fracas in the
churchyard, Wesley and Sidna were indicted for disturbing a public
worship service. When they heard of the indictments, the brothers
left Carroll County and went to nearby Mount Airy, where they
would technically be out of reach of Virginia law officers without
extradition papers.
But the Edwards didn’t count on the
per-sentence of the commonwealth’s attorney and the sheriff.
Despite his lack of jurisdiction in North Carolina, Sheriff Webb
dispatched deputies Pink Samuels and Peter Easter after Wesley and
Sidna, who were arrested without a struggle in Mount Airy. The
deputies evidently didn’t trust the boys to stay put in the back
of the wagon, so they were handcuffed and tied to the wagon posts
as the party crossed Fancy Gap on the way back to Hillsville. The
road passed by Sidna Allen’s store and Floyd Allen’s house, and
when Floyd saw his nephews “trussed up like hogs,” his notorious
temper flared.
Floyd was already angry because the other young
men involved in the churchyard brawl escaped without punishment, a
fact he attributed to his own previous fight with Commonwealth’s
Attorney Foster and Foster’s resulting enmity. Sidna Allen
summarized the Allens’ side of it in his Memoirs: “Wesley and
Sidna had never been in trouble before, were neither dangerous nor
desperate, and were charged only with committing a misdemeanor;
yet they were not only handcuffed but also tied to the buggy in
which they rode with ropes, despite the fact that they were in the
keeping of two strong and well-armed men.”
What happened next, like nearly every-thing
else in the Allen saga, is disputed. Deputies Easter and Samuels
claimed that Floyd, Sidna and Barnard Allen attacked and beat them
and freed Wesley and Sidna Edwards. The Allens claimed that Floyd
re-quested his nephews be untied, was threatened with a gun, and
single-handedly disarmed the deputies without harming either one.
Whatever happened, the following day Floyd took his nephews to
Hillsville, where they served 60 and 30 day sentences? For his
pains, Floyd was charged with “illegal rescue of prisoners,” as
the Virginia law of the time put it. After several continuances,
trial was set for March 12, 1912.
There were many in Carroll County who believed
that trying Floyd Allen on any charge was asking for trouble.
Floyd’s biggest fault, said his brother Garland, was his
“uncontrollable temper.” Garland said that their mother had more
than once been forced to tie Floyd up with rope when he was a
child, and by the time he was a grown man his temper was
legendary. It wasn’t reserved just for outsiders, either. Floyd
and his brother Jack got into a fight once over some barrels of
brandy in their father’s estate and shot each other. Jack
recovered, but it began to appear as if Floyd had fought his last
brawl, and he sent for his brother Jack, “to make his peace with
him,” he said, “be-fore crossing the divide.” Jack heeded the
pitiful request and sorrowfully approached his brother’s deathbed.
He should have known better. When Floyd saw the
grief-stricken Jack shuffling slowly to his bedside, he grabbed
for a revolver he had concealed under his pillow and attempted to
give his brother a ticket to cross the “divide” with him. Jack was
saved by another brother who grabbed Floyd’s arm before he could
squeeze off a shot. Floyd recovered from his own wounds shortly
thereafter. “He was too damned mean to die,” said an acquaintance.
Then there was the Combs incident. In 1904
Floyd wanted to buy a farm owned by one of his brothers, but they
could not agree on a price. A man named Combs wanted the land
badly enough to pay the asking price and bought it despite Floyd’s
warnings not to “butt in.” Not long afterward Floyd shot Combs
(who recovered), and was indicted and tried on charges of assault.
Contemporary reports say that Floyd let it be known that if
convicted of the charge, he woul4 kill the judge and jurors. It
seems likely the court was influenced by such threats because,
despite the gravity of the charge, Floyd was fined a mere $100 and
sentenced to a symbolic one hour in jail.
But even an hour was too much for a man who had
sworn he would “die and go to hell” before serving a minute in
jail. Floyd’s lawyers managed to have the 60-minute sentence
dismissed, and Floyd reportedly forced Combs to pay the $100 fine.
There were some in Carroll County who believed that Floyd Allen
was a law unto himself, and the Combs decision reinforced that
belief. G.M.N. Parker, who wrote about the incident in The
Mountain Massacre, said Carroll County had “two governments, one
by the county and one by the (Allen) Clan.”
In 1912 Floyd Allen was again scheduled for
trial. It was a perfect time, believed many county officials, to
demonstrate just who really governed Carroll County.
According to a prominent Carroll County citizen
who is a repository of local history, about three weeks before
Floyd Allen’s trial, Commonwealth’s Attorney William Foster
received a letter promising he would die if Floyd Allen was found
guilty. Foster took the letter to Judge Thornton Massie, who was
scheduled to try the case, and requested not only extra deputies
but a search of all who entered the courtroom during the trial.
Judge Massie denied the request: “1 think that would show
cowardice on our part,” he is reported to have said. Judge Massie
never changed his mind, and when his body was re-moved from the
courtroom on March 14, Foster’s letter and another similar one
were found in his coat pocket.
The jury in Floyd Allen’s case was unable to
reach a verdict on March 13. Judge Massie, in his only concession
to warnings of trouble had them sequestered in Thorn-ton’s Hotel
that night, and scheduled the next morning’s proceedings for 8
a.m., an hour early. Floyd Allen, still free, rode home with his
brother Sidna and spent Wednesday night at his house.
Thursday morning dawned cold, wet and foggy. A
bone-chilling drizzle was falling from the slate-gray clouds, but
it wasn’t doing much to melt the snow that still lay on the
ground. Despite the miserable weather, over a hundred spectators
had crowded into the courtroom by 8 a.m.; a lucky few were warming
their hands over the wood stove in the rear of the room. The Allen
family was well represented: Floyd; his sons Victor and Claud;
Sidna Allen; Jack Allen’s son Friel; Sidna and Wesley Edwards, and
a sprinkling of other relatives.
At 8:30 the jury filed back into the courtroom
with a verdict. Floyd Allen, his attorney W.D. Bolen, and
assistant clerk of court S. Floyd Landreth were sitting in the
small fenced dock facing the judge and jury. Sidna Allen and Claud
Allen were in the northeast corner of the courtroom, standing on
benches to see over the crowd. Friel Allen sat in the back of the
room, and the Edwards boys stood on benches next to the north
wall. The sheriff, commonwealth’s attorney, clerk of court, and
several deputies were standing at the south end of the courtroom.
The room was hushed as the jury foreman announced the verdict:
guilty as charged, with a recommended sentence of a year in prison
and a $1,000 fine. A motion to set aside the verdict was denied,
as was a request for bail. Judge Massie instructed Sheriff Webb to
take charge of the prisoner, and Webb began to move toward the
dock.
What happened next will never be known with
absolute certainty. The issue of who fired the first shot has
divided Carroll Countians for the past 70 years and, in the words
of one Richmond researcher into the case, has caused the county to
“shut itself off from the rest of the world.”
Most witnesses agree that Floyd Allen stood up
and announced to the court some-thing like, “Gentlemen, I just
ain’t a goin’.” A shot was fired, and for the next 90 seconds the
courtroom became a shooting gallery as the Allens, Dexter Goad,
William Foster and the law officers, all produced guns and began
to exchange fire. A screaming, shouting mass of spectators tried
to leave the courtroom at once as bullets whizzed over their heads
and thumped into the courtroom walls. Attorney Bolen dropped to
the floor and the wounded Floyd Allen fell on top of him. Bolen is
said to have screamed at his client, “Floyd, they are going to
kill me shooting at you!” The battle moved down the courthouse
steps and out onto the streets of Hillsville, with some of the
Allens hiding behind the statue of the Confederate soldier while
reloading their pistols. The Allens headed for the livery stable.
Back in the courtroom. Judge Massie, Sheriff Webb, Commonwealth’s
Attorney Foster and a juror named C.C. Fowler lay dead on the
floor. A witness in another case, Betty Ayers, walked back to her
home and died the following day. Dexter Goad had been shot in the
mouth but recovered from his wounds.
Floyd Allen was wounded too badly to escape,
and he and his son Victor, who had taken no part in the violence,
spent the night at a local hotel and were arrested the next
morning. Wesley Edwards, Friel Allen and Claud Allen escaped
together, and were soon joined by Sidna Allen. Sidna Edwards hid
out for a few days before surrendering himself to the authorities.
According to Virginia law in 1912, when a
sheriff died all his deputies lost their legal powers. Carroll
County, therefore, was now without law enforcement. Assistant
clerk of court S. Floyd Landreth, realizing the imperative need
for some sort of civil authority, rushed down the street to the
telegraph office. Landreth sent the following telegram—collect—to
Governor William Hodges Mann:
Send troops to the County of Carroll at
once. Mob violence, the court. Commonwealth’s Attorney, Sheriff,
some jurors and others shot on the conviction of Floyd Allen for a
felony. Sheriff and Commonwealth’s Attorney dead, court serious.
Look after this now.
Governor Mann phoned the Baldwin-Felts
Detective Agency in Roanoke and asked them to hunt down the Allens
who were still at large. A special train bound for Galax left
Roanoke late Thursday night with Baldwin-Felts men aboard.
Prevented by swollen creeks from making the last leg of the
journey by wagon, the detectives trudged the last few miles in a
chill, insistent rain.
The weather that greeted the Baldwin-Felts men
was an omen of the way things were to be for the next five weeks.
There was some initial good luck: Claud Allen was captured not
long after Sidna Edwards surrendered. Friel Allen was reported to
have surrendered also, but a local historian who has made a study
of the case claims that Friel’s father, Jack, turned him over to
the detectives in exchange for their efforts to avoid his
execution.
But unfortunately for the Baldwin-Felts men,
Wesley Edwards and Sidna Allen were far more difficult to track
down in the rugged mountain country surrounding Hillsville.
Knowing the terrain well, the pair easily eluded the frustrated
detectives, who spent a good deal of their time posing for
dramatic horseback photographs. The fugitives frequently had hot
meals and warm beds in the homes of friends and relatives while
the Baldwin-Felts men slogged down mountain roads in weather that
remained almost consistently bad.
After five weeks of hiding, Sidna Allen and his
nephew decided to leave Carroll County for the west. Passing
through Mount Airy, Pilot Mountain and Winston-Salem, which were
plastered with wanted posters bearing their faces, they walked to
Salisbury and bought train tickets for Asheville. From there they
went to Des Moines, Iowa, where they found jobs as carpenters and
lived together in a boarding house.
Six months to the day after the courthouse
massacre Sidna and Wesley were arrested by the persistent
Baldwin-Felts detectives. Sidna Allen maintained until the end of
his life that he and his nephew were sold out by Wesley’s
sweetheart, Maude Iroller, who supposedly led the detectives to
them in exchange for $500. But a local expert on the case says
that Miss Iroller’s father, who had never approved of his
daughter’s romance with Wesley Ed-wards, tipped off the detectives
that Maude was going to Des Moines to marry him.
The wheels of justice turned far faster in 1912
than today. Floyd Allen went on trial in Wytheville on April 30,
charged with the slaying of Commonwealth’s Attorney Foster. On May
18 he was convicted and sentenced to death in the electric chair.
In July, after three trials, Claud, too, was sentenced to death
for Foster’s murder. Friel Allen was tried in August and confessed
to shooting Foster; he was sentenced to 18 years in prison. Sidna
Allen and Wesley Edwards were sentenced in November to 35 and 27
years respectively.
After three stays of execution, Floyd and his
son Claud became the 47 th and 48 th victims of Virginia’s
relatively new electric chair. Floyd was electrocuted at 1:22 p.m.
on March 28, 1913, and Claud died 11 minutes later. The execution
was accomplished despite some last-minute technical delays related
to Governor Mann’s absence from the state, which were resolved
when the governor returned from Pennsylvania for the express
purpose of allowing the execution. In the final weeks prior to the
execution date, petitions with thousands of signatures were
delivered to the governor requesting commutation of Claud’s
sentence, who, it was said, had been shooting only in his father’s
defense. The petitions failed to convince Governor Mann.
The governor was also unmoved by a number of
death threats mailed to him, at least one of which was in the same
hand-writing as the original threat to Common-wealth’s Attorney
Foster. Baldwin-Felts detectives were never able to prove who
wrote the threatening letters, and those mailed to Governor Mann
are stored with his papers today in Richmond.
The deaths of Floyd and Claud had a morbidly
bizarre aftermath. The bodies were taken to Biyle’s Funeral Parlor
where, over the bitter protests of Victor Allen, thousands of
gawking spectators gathered to view the remains. Richmond
newspapers reported that schoolchildren with books, mothers with
babies in arms and young men and women out on the town filed past
the bodies, laughing and talking. Victor Allen was not permitted
custody of his kinsmen’s bodies until 11 p.m., shortly before they
were shipped by rail to Mount Airy.
Among the questions still debated in Carroll
County on long nights before the wood stove, the most persistent
is, “Who fired the first shot in the courtroom on March 14, 1912?”
The Allens claimed it was Dexter Goad, who, along with William
Foster, had supposedly engaged in a politically motivated vendetta
against them. The most vociferous proponent of the vendetta theory
today is Rufus Gardner, author of a book on the subject and the
flamboyant owner of a flea market, package store and souvenir shop
on Route 52 at the state line.
Gardner has a one-room museum devoted to the
Courthouse Tragedy in the back of his souvenir shop, and he will
expound to whoever is willing to listen his ideas on the massacre,
which consist largely of praise for the Allens and bitter
denunciations of their enemies. “Hell yes it was Dexter Goad shot
first at Floyd Allen. Everybody knows it,” says Gardner. “It was
politics, just politics—the Allens was good Democrats and the
courthouse crowd was Republicans, and they had it in for the
Allens ‘cause they was so popular and well liked.” Gardner’s book
is a patchwork of newspaper accounts, legal documents (“I stole’em
out of the Carroll County Courthouse and there’s not a damned
thing they can do about it.”), letters, and sections lifted whole
from the books of others without attribution. Gardner is a
Courthouse Massacre entrepreneur. In addition to his museum, his
book and his souvenirs, he now publishes and sells the Memoirs of
Sidna Allen, which read far more coherently than Gardner’s own
volume. “The Allens have been a great family since 1476, the
finest in Virginia,” crows Gardner. Around Hillsville it is
commonly reported that Gardner is related to the Allens, a
connection he denies.
In the back of Rufus Gardner’s book is a copy
of an affidavit he obtained in 1967, in which two men who were
with Woodson Quesinberry when he died swear that Ques-inerry
claimed responsibility for the first shot. But a local historian
who has done much work on the case says that one of the deponents
listed on the affidavit told him that swearing out the document
“was the easiest 25 dollars 1 ever made.” About all Gardner’s
affidavit accomplished when it was made public 15 years ago was to
fan old resentments. “That document is worthless, let me assure
you,” said a prominent local citizen.
The same local historian also says there is
little doubt that Claud Allen fired the first shot in the
courtroom that day: “There’s no question in the world, none
whatever.” Not only is this theory backed up by the bulk of the
trial testimony, but it is certainly less implausible than the
Goad hypothesis. Why would a prominent local figure who had just
seen his enemy put away for a year decide to open fire in full
view of over a hundred witnesses? And if Goad indeed fired the
first shot and the Allens were merely shooting in self-defense,
why wouldn’t Goad have been the first victim? Not only did Dexter
Goad survive, but Commonwealth’s Attorney Foster and Sheriff Webb,
both of whom were standing near Goad, received many more wounds.
Yet another mystery surrounds the tombstone of
Floyd and Claud Allen. The original stone supposedly read
something like the following: “Judiciously Murdered by the State
of Virginia Over the Protest of 40,000 of Its Citizens.” Most
Carroll Countians will tell you that the stone was removed as one
of the conditions for the pardon of Sidna Allen and Wesley Edwards
in 1926. Although a local person of great credibility claims to
have seen the stone, there are some doubts that it ever existed.
Not only are several different versions of its inscription
recorded, but—amazingly—no photograph of it has surfaced. There
are hundreds of photos of every other item relating to the
massacre, but apparently none of the apocryphal tombstone, despite
a $500 reward Rufus Gardner offered for a photograph of it. Says
courthouse custodian and massacre buff Bill White, “I have to
doubt that it ever existed to begin with."
Few people are now alive in Carroll County who
can remember that fateful March day in 1912. One of the few is
Mrs. Viola Harrison, a frail but alert woman in her 80’s who is
Jack Allen’s daughter. She is accustomed to being asked about the
tragedy, but has talked little about it to outsiders. “I just
don’t like to give out information because you don’t know how you
feel about it yourself,” she says. She has good memories of her
uncle Sidna Allen: “I remember that people liked him very much. He
was a good neighbor and kind to people; everybody that worked for
him liked him.” Mrs. Harrison contends that a political feud
played a part in the events of March 14, 1912, and also believes
that public opinion in Carroll County is swinging around in favor
of the Allens. “But whatever you do,” she says, “please write only
the truth. People here have never really known what hap-pened
because of distortions in what they read.”
Truth is always a scarce commodity, and nowhere
more so than in the interminable wrangles over the infamous
Hillsville Court-house Massacre. But the story of the Allen Clan
has taken on a life of its own these past seven decades and it may
be that the ultimate truth has very little to do with the tale’s
fascination. It seems unlikely that the case will ever be settled
to the satisfaction of everybody in Carroll County. What does seem
certain is that they won’t quit talking about it—not now, and not
for some time to come.
Originally published in the November, 1982 issue of The
Roanoker