Lee County Genealogy |
Iowa State Penitentiary News
Compiled by Sally Youngquist
Oct. 2009
There will be more news added later
Iowa State
Penitentiary
Cemetery
This is an
important file
that may help researchers throughout the state of Iowa
News Articles
Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette
HISTORY OF
IOWA PARDONS
MANY LIFE CONVICTS FREED
TWO YEARS AGO.
Present Legislature Opposes Repetition of Such a Spasm of Generosity.
Excerpt from news articles
Des Moines, Iowa, April 8Of the twenty live persons who have been
paroled from
the Iowa penitentiaries on recommendations of the legislatures,
since the law making this recommendation a requisite thirty years ago,
seven
were granted clemency by act of the legislature two years ago; and this
spasm
of generosity was the direct cause of a great increase in the number of
applications for pardon, so that the present legislature was asked to
consider
seventeen cases.
There was just a bit of scandal in connection with the pardons of two
years
ago. One prisoner was paroled with the understanding that he would buy
a farm
with the $1,200 which he had in the bank; but before he received his
pardon
papers it was alleged that he had paid it all to lobbyists to secure
his parole
recommendation. There was much indignation felt because of men working
for a
pardon for pay. Another of those pardoned is said to be engaged
today working hard to pay of in
installments an
obligation of $500 to a Des Moines lawyer for his work in securing the
pardon.
The older members of the legislature felt that the precedent set two
years ago
of granting so many pardons by legislative consent was a bad one and
they set
their faces
against a repetition of the incident.
For this reason, as well as for the reason that the applicants this
year have
much less merit, the pardon business will be small. There are
forty-nine
persons serving time in the state penitentiaries under life sentence,
at this
time, but it is surmised that the number includes only a very few who
have been
in the penitentiary over ten years. The lifers, apparently, do not live
long.
PARDONS GRANTED
FORT MADISON
The following are the prisoners who have been pardoned from life
sentences for murder
in the first degree since the law went into force in 1874 requiring
legislative
approval
Frank Linehart, Clayton county, committed
_____ , pardoned 1878.
William Riley, Blackhawk county, committed
October 7,
1867, pardoned April 12, 1880.
E. J. Bruce, Lee, December 23, 1876, May 12, 1884.
J. W. Werrick. Harrison, March 10, 1873,
September 9,
1884.
Finnis Allen, Fremont, November 4, 1879,
December 10,
1884.
John S. Little, Jasper, October 4, 1875, March 20. 1892.
Charles Cook, Lee, May 19, 1882, March 25, 1892.
John Saul, Decatur, August., 21, 1877,
September 2.
1893.
A. T. Hocket. Mahaska, June 11, 1885,
April 30, 1890.
Henry O. Osborn, Polk, December 25, 1883, January 12, 189_.
James Johnson, Pottawattamie, January 15, 1885, April 14, 1898.
George L. Stanley, Story, April 30, 1772. April 20, 1902.
Joseph McCreary, Mills, May 21, 1879, April 29, 1902.
Average years served, 13 years
PRESENT LIFE CONVICTS.
The following are the prisoners in the state penitentiaries under
conviction of
murder in the first degree
FT MADISON PENITENTIARY
W. P. Glyndon, Hardin county, committed
April 12,
1878.
M. B. Foster, Taylor county, Dec. 24, 1900.
Byron Gwinn, Lucas county, Sept. 8, I89l.
Byron Parntake, Van Buren county,
Dec 21, 1891.
George Weems, Polk county, Aug. 1, 1894.
Stephen Courtney, Louisa county, March 29,
l895.
Buck Mayberry, Wayne county, June 20, 1895.
Orman McPherson, Louisa county,
March 25, 1897.
John G. Steele, Monroe county, Sept. 21,
1897.
Alonxo Robblns,
Lee county, Jan. 7, 1898.
Alex Storms, Louisa, county, Sept. 30, 1898.
Will Adams, Marshall county, Dec. 16, 1898.
W. M. H. Jones, Henry county, Oct. 21, 1889.
Clarence Mills, Davis county, Nov. I3,
1899. '
George Wright, Muscatine county, June 2,
1900.
Chester Tyler, Jasper county, Feb. 5, 1902.
Ira Noble, Muscatine county, June 2, 1902
William Lucus, Page county, Nov 2, 1902
James Barns, Polk county, April 30, 1903
NOTE: This news paper was hard to
read. You
may want to check the spelling of names and the dates.
Other news
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1890
William Porter of Atlantic bas been sent to Fort Madison for two years
for
horse stealing.
Tuesday, February 25, 1896
John Cummins, sent from Polk county for
five years for
burglary, died at the Ft. Madison penitentiary and was buried in the
prison
cemetery.
Wednesday, June 05, 1889
Governor Lurrabec has paroled Paddy Cok out of the Ft. Madison penitentiary, where
he had been
sentenced five years ago for a period of seventeen years.
NOVEMBER 27, 1893
FAIRFIELD, Nov. 27Ed. Markley, the 'fake foot racer," who has been on
trial here for several days, has been sentenced to Ft. Madison
penitentiary for
three, years at hard labor About a year ago Markley with four
companions
conspired to swindle W. E. Bowman, the bookkeeper of the Farmlngton,
la , bank, out of 34,000 by a bogus foot
race. The
race took place here and Markley, The race on whom Bowman placed his
money,
threw the race to his opponent and in company wlth
his friends and the stake holder jumped into a cab and fled. They
subsequently
quarreled in dividing the spoils. in St
Louis, which
led to their arrest, Markley's companions, Thomas Baner
and Fred Cutpingbarn. are
held in heavy bonds will be tried next January. The case so far has
cost the
county $2,000.
Tuesday, November 29, 1904
Otis Green, sent to the Ft, Madison
penitentiary from Des Moines for the
murder of his wife, has reformed and
become a model prisoner.. He now expresses
a desire to write books for the
edification of the blind. At the time
he killed his wife he attempted sul- .
cide, but the
wound only
resulted in
total blindness. He is now making
trinkets, from the proceeds of which lie
expects to get enough to buy a writing
machine.
Tuesday, January 24, 1905
Charles Johnson, who was sent to Ft. Madison penitentiary for ten
years, has
completed hts term, and will now be
committed in the
insane asylum at
Mt. Pleasant.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1905
The smallpox quarantine at the Ft. Madison
penitentiary has been raised
Millard Buck, who was sent to the penitentiary from Fort Madison for
the murder
of Dr. Porter, is reported as insane at the Fort Madison prison.
More News from Various Papers
IOWA STATE WEEKLY REGISTER
Friday, July 10, 1874
Fort Madison _ The report of the Ft.
Madison
penitentiary for the month of June was received yesterday by the
Auditor of the
State. It shows that 15 new prisoners were received during the month;
which
were four from Des Moines county and eight
military
prisoners from the Department of the Platte. Twenty-four were
discharged, nine
by expiration of sentence, one by pardon ,
fourteen US
prisoners by military order. The number in confinement now is two
hundred and
sixty-four.
DAILY IOWA CAPITAL, THURSDAY
DECEMBER 24, 1896.
John Hogan, forgery; seven years in Ft. Madison.
John Tillotson,
burglary; five years in
Ft. Madison. David West, burglary; four
years in Ft.
Madison.
Geo. A .Taylor,
burglary; eighteen
months in Ft. Madison. Grant Dimmitt. grand
larceny five years in Ft. Madison.
DES MOINES DAILY NEWS
Saturday, October 15, 1898
Judge Bishop in the criminal division for sentence this morning all of
whom had
pleaded guilty to the indictments found by the grand jury. Earnest
Draper was
given three years in Ft. Madison penitentiary for breaking and
entering. In
passing sentence in this case Judge Bishop said "one peculiar thing
about
the men before the court on this charge was the number of young men
that had
become before the court" The officers of the city and of the court must
do
something to break up what seems to be a prevailing spirit among tho youthful element 'that are starting out on a
criminal
career. John Burlin was given one year In the in. Madison
penitentiary for
uttering a forged instrument. He threw himself upon the clemency
of the
court and received the lightest sentence that could be given him. could be given him.
DES MOINES DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1899
BURLINGTON, -March 20.Walt O'Brien, the Green Bay bad man, who had been
serving
a five-year sentence for cattle stealing, but paroled by Govern
Shaw about six weeks, ago, will now have an excellent opportunity to
continue
serving his sentence, and will have an Indictment for another crime
awaiting
his release from the Ft. Madison Penitentiary. O'Brien was arrested by
Officers
Dcvo and Desplan
this
morning at the request of Chief Kennedy, of Ft. Madison. In his company
was
Frank Howard, the I6-year old son of a Gem City restaurant keeper who
had been
lured away from home. O'Brien is charged with robbery. He held up a Ft.
Madison
man and relieved him of a gold watch and $120 in green backs, mostly
five-dollar bills.
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