Murder of Pearl Bryan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pearl Bryan
Pearl Bryan.jpg
Studio photograph of Bryan
Bornc. 1874
Died (aged 22)
Cause of deathBeheading
Resting placeForest Hill Cemetery, Indiana
NationalityAmerican

Pearl Bryan (c. 1874–1896) was a 22-year-old pregnant American woman from Greencastle, Indiana who was found decapitated in Fort Thomas, Kentucky, in 1896.[1] Her head was severed below the fifth vertebra. Due to the murder's gruesome nature, it achieved significant notoriety at the time.[2] More recently, there have been claims that her ghost haunts Bobby Mackey's Music World located in Wilder, Kentucky.

Background[]

Pearl Bryan was born to Alexander S. Bryan and Susan Jane Bryan.[3] Her father was a well-respected farmer in the community.[4] She was a graduate of . At the time of her murder, she had begun working as a Sunday school teacher. Bryan had left her home in Greencastle on January 28, 1896, under the pretense that she was visiting a friend in Indianapolis.

Convictions[]

Bryan's body was found headless[5] just behind what is now the YMCA in Fort Thomas, Kentucky, on February 1, 1896, by a 17-year-old farm hand named Johnny Hewling. According to the presiding coroner, Bryan was found with multiple wounds across her back and her hands. He also indicated that she was decapitated while still alive.[6] She was five months pregnant at the time of her death.[7] Her body was identified by the tag in her custom-made shoes from Greencastle, Indiana.[5] Pearl Bryan's headless body is buried in the family plot at Forest Hill Cemetery in Greencastle.

Scott Jackson, a dental student at the Ohio College of Dental Surgery, was soon arrested for the murder, and later implicated fellow student and roommate Alonzo M. Walling.[6][5] During the trial it was revealed that Jackson had a secret romance with Bryan for several months prior to her murder. Allegedly, on January 31, 1896, Jackson and Walling slipped cocaine into Bryan's drink while they were at a saloon in nearby Cincinnati, Ohio, and proceeded to murder her later that night. An analysis of Bryan’s stomach showed that there was indeed cocaine present in the organ at the time of her death. In response to the location of Bryan’s head, Jackson and Walling gave several answers, such as at the bottom of the Ohio River and in a sandbar in Dayton, Kentucky. The nearby Covington waterworks and parts of the Miami and Erie Canal were also drained in search of her head. However, investigations in these places turned up nothing. When interviewed in 1937, former detective Cal Crim of the Cincinnati Police Department theorized that Jackson and Walling burned her head in a furnace of the dental college that they attended. To this day, her head has never been located.[6] Jackson's trial began April 21 and ended on May 14, 1896. Walling's trial began on May 26 and ended July 18 of the same year.[8] Both were convicted of first degree murder and hanged in the morning of March 20, 1897, behind the Newport Campbell County Courthouse on York Street, just south of the Taylor-Southgate bridge.[8] According to reports, both Jackson and Walling survived the initial drop that was supposed to break their necks, and instead were strangled to death some minutes after.[8] They were the last people hanged in Newport. The gallows located behind the courthouse were torn down following the execution.[5]

The case was very popular nationally at the time, provoking citizens to take souvenirs from the crime scene (even branches), and buy Pearl Bryan "merchandise" from a store near the Newport Courthouse. One report says the trial was "theatrical". Local newspapers dubbed the case "the trial of the century".[8] The actual double-hanging was urged to be done hastily due to the threat of a public lynching by friends and relatives of Bryan. Jim Reis, author, historian, and well-known reporter and columnist for the Kentucky Post, related in an article titled "Pieces of the Past" that even during a jail break at the Newport jail, the two men remained in their cell in fear of being lynched and were heavily protected.[8]

Popular culture[]

In the 1910's and the 1920's, several folk songs surrounding the murder were created and popularized. The first to be recorded was by American country singer Vernon Dalhart in 1926. A year later, in 1927, folk singer Bradley Kincaid recorded a song named "Pearl Bryan" on the topic of the murder. Folk singers Dick Burnett and Leonard Rutherford also recorded their own versions in the same era.

In 2001, San Francisco-based folklore band recorded a song that focused on the murder. [9]

An episode of Ghost Adventures explored Bryan's murder and claims of supernatural activity at Bobby Mackey's Music World. The Ghost Adventures crew claim an device allowed them to contact the spirit of Scott Jackson and hear him confess to the murder.

Bryan's murder is featured in the second episode of Most Terrifying Places in America.

The case was featured in an episode of the PRX podcast Criminal, which focused on the many versions of a folk song about the murder.[10]

The BuzzFeed Unsolved episode called The Ghosts and Demons Of Bobby Mackey's reviewed part of Pearl's murder.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Pearl Bryan: A Murder Story". Putnam County Public Library. Archived from the original on 31 October 2013. Retrieved 30 March 2014.
  2. ^ "SCOTT JACKSON THE MURDERER.; Found Guilty of Killing Pearl Bryan and Sentenced to Die". The New York Times. May 15, 1896. Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  3. ^ "Pearl Bryan's Mother Dead". News-Journal. July 29, 1913. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Pearl Bryan's Father Dead". The Mitchell Commercial. July 4, 1901. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d JACKSON AND WALLING DIE; Execution at Newport, Ky. March 21, 1897 New York Times
  6. ^ a b c "Clipped From The Indianapolis Star". The Indianapolis Star. March 7, 1937. p. 70 – via newspapers.com.
  7. ^ Polenberg, Richard (2015). Hear My Sad Story: The True Tales That Inspired "Stagolee," "John Henry," and Other Traditional American Folk Songs. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-5017-0148-1. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Clipped From Dayton Daily News". Dayton Daily News. March 1, 1936. p. 43 – via newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Polenberg, Richard (2015). Hear My Sad Story: The True Tales That Inspired "Stagolee," "John Henry," and Other Traditional American Folk Songs. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-1-5017-0148-1. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
  10. ^ "Episode 24: Pearl Bryan (8.7.2015)". Criminal. Retrieved 7 August 2015.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""