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David P. "Dave" Sutton JR. 1850~1893

SUTTON

Posted By: IRISH EYES ARE SMILING (email)
Date: 6/24/2016 at 12:13:25

Courtesy of the Ottumwa Courier Feb 18, 1893

On the frigid night after Valentines Day in 1893, David P. “Dave” Sutton, Jr., 43, was found near death in a barn behind a meat market on the east side of Ottumwa.

At first, it appeared Sutton was struck on the head; when doctors cleaned away the blood, however, they found pistol wounds.

Sutton died at noon the next day without regaining consciousness.

Although some speculated Sutton took his own life, a coroner’s jury ruled his death was murder.

Courtesy photo City of Ottumwa
Sutton had recently quarreled with 34-year-old William Skaggs, who was arrested on suspicion of the murder but then released.

Some in the Ottumwa community saw strong similarities between David Sutton’s murder and that three months later on May 23, 1893 of James Chamberlain, who was fatally attacked on the Wabash Railroad trestle over the Des Moines River in the old Richmond section of the city.

No one was charged with either the Sutton or Chamberlain murder. To read about the unsolved 1893 murder of James Chamberlain, click here.

David P. Sutton’s Life

from the Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette
David Perry Sutton, Jr. was born in 1850 in Jessamine, Kentucky, to Isabella Reynolds and David Perry Sutton, Sr. He had five siblings: Richard Perry “Dick” Sutton, Martha Sutton Andrew, George H. Sutton, Mary J. Sutton Smith, and Margaret Sutton Slocum.

Sutton’s father passed away the year he was born; his mother married John Coley and there were two stepbrothers — Benjamin Coley and John W. Coley.

After his stepfather died in the 1854 cholera epidemic, Sutton’s mother moved to Lexington, Kentucky, to raise and educate her children. In 1856, however, she also passed away.

Some of his siblings were sent to an orphans’ home. David and his older brother Richard went to live with an uncle in Evanston, Indiana.

Dick Sutton, well-known brother of murder victim David P. Sutton (Ancestry.com).

By the time they were teenagers, the two oldest Sutton brothers were supporting themselves and moved farther west.

David settled in Shelbyville, Illinois, where he served as City Marshall. On December 28, 1871, he married Martha E. Phelps.

At the time of his death, Sutton was farming in Mahaska County, Iowa, and was mostly known as the brother of Ottumwa resident Richard “Dick” Sutton: restaurateur; proprietor of the 50-room Dick’s Hotel; owner of the Turner Opera House; vaudevillian; and — as newspapers of the time liked to call him — all-around “showman.”

David Sutton’s place of burial is unknown.


 

Wapello Obituaries maintained by Deborah Lynne Barker.
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