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Newspaper Articles
SHOOTING AFFRAY AT MT. AYR.
The Chariton Leader, Chariton, Iowa
Saturday, June 26, 1880
News of a terrible shooting affray at Mt. Ayr reached us
on Wednesday morning, and during the afternoon three prisoners
were placed in the charge of Sheriff Landes for safe keeping.
It was the intention of the Sheriff from Mt. Ayr to take them
to Afton, but before reaching this place he received a dispatch
stating that a mob of nearly one hundred had started across
the country to lynch the prisoners. Two of the parties in
the affray, we hear, are dead and another has had his hand
amputated. The prisoners' names are THOS. GOLDEN, WM. FITZIMMONS
and BARNY FITZIMMONS; the first being a half-brother to the
others. The following account of the affray we clip from the
Mt. Ayr Journal:
Last Tuesday is a day long to be remembered by the people
of this place as the date of one of the most brutal murders
ever perpetrated. The victim was WM. MILLS, of Grant Township,
a man well known and respected; industrious, energetic and
esteemed by all. The murderer is WM. FITZIMMONS, one of the
keepers of the Golden Saloon, and a half-brother to the GOLDEN
boys. MILLS, together with the HOOKER boys, 'LANT' BENSON,
TOM CONLEY, GEO. DOBBINS and WM. CYPHERS went up into the
saloon and MILLS called for a beer, and was refused by one
of the boys. He remarked that he always paid for what he got,
but they refused to let him have it. MILLS then turned around
and said no more. LANT BENSON then placed a couple of pool
balls upon the table and told the boys when he had played
a nickel's worth to tell him and he would quit. TOM GOLDEN
came at him with a large lamp and struck him. The row commenced
then, the other two boys, BARNEY and WM. FITZIMMONS coming
from behind the cou! nter with revolvers. At sight of the
revolvers BENSON and CONLEY ran down the front stairway, and
were fired after by BARNEY when near the bottom but not struck.
WM. FITZIMMONS placed a revolver at CYPHER's breast, but just
as he pulled trigger DOBBINS knocked it aside, the ball merely
grazing CYPHER's side, and through the hand of a young man
named MCDONALD. DOBBINS was struck a fearful blow on the head
and somewhat stunned. MILLS then ran down the back stairway,
and started across the street towards Wall's Grocery, and
WM. FITZIMMONS after him, shooting as he ran.
He fired three shots, all of them hitting MILLS in the back,
the last of which is supposed to have been the fatal one,
as he was noticed to drop. He staggered into Misses Buck and
Merrill's Milliner Shop and dropped dead. He was removed in
a short time to the Odd Fellow's Hall, where Drs. Bailey and
Wiley extracted a ball from his breast. The Coroner held an
inquest, and the verdict of the jury was that W! M. MILLS
had met his death by a revolver, fired in the hands of WM.
FITZIMMONS. MRS. MILLS was sent for and arrived about sundown.
The body was conveyed to his home in Grant Township, the procession
leaving town about half past nine. Terrible excitement prevails,
and Capt. Askern has guarded the jail ever since the arrests
with a body of militia; to protect the prisoners from a rumored
mob. The prisoners were taken away on Wednesday to the Afton
Jail.
At this movement WM. BROWN, JIM FARRIS and others became
indignant and proceeding to the depot, an attempt was made
to get the prisoners and bring them back to jail, but when
Capt. Askern, the Sheriff and Marshal drew their revolvers,
the crowd quieted down and maintained order. Some thought
it safest to take the prisoners away, while others thought
they should be kept where they were. TOM CONLEY and HOOKER's
boys were the only boys in the row that came out uninjured.
The prisoners' version of the case is that MILLS had threatened
to clean them out on that day, and that they were knocked
down the stairs before they made any resistance. They plead
self defense.
Copied by Nancee(McMurtrey)Seifert April 24, 2004
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