A detail of Charley's life that I am currently trying to track down is which execution did he witness while a student journalist at Ohio State. Yes, Charley was invited by a friend at the Columbus Dispatch to witness an execution and he invited grandpa Fred to join them.
Ohio Historical Society |
Grandpa declined, thank you very much.
Capital punishment has been a part of Ohio’s frontier justice since it became a state in 1803. An execution was carried out by public hanging in the county where the crime was committed until 1885 when a law was passed that required executions to be carried out at the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus.
Thankfully only two Hocking County men were hanged in that timeframe: Elias Primmer (the father-in-law of my first cousin, three times removed) in 1856 and Isaac Edwards in 1895.
In 1897, the electric chair, considered to be a more humane form of execution, replaced the gallows in Ohio -- only the second state to do so. (Ohio-born Thomas Edison helped develop it in New York despite being opposed to the death penalty.)
Ohio's chair ultimately had an automatic timer which first sent 1,750 volts through the condemned person's body for 20 seconds, followed by 50 seconds at 600 volts, before finishing with 10 seconds of 1,750 volts.
Known as "Old Sparky" to the public (and "Old Thunderbolt" to inmates) it killed 312 men and three women, beginning with William Haas, 17, of Hamilton County in 1897 and ending with Donald Reinbolt, 29, of Columbus in 1963.
I have narrowed my search to 37 men (slightly more than half of whom were white) who were all convicted of murder and electrocuted between the fall of 1921 and January 31, 1925:
In 1972, the United States Supreme Court declared the death penalty to be unconstitutional. Although Ohio reinstated the death penalty in 1974, it did not resume executions until 1999 and none chose to use the electric chair.
On November 15, 2001, Governor Bob Taft signed House Bill 362 eliminating the electric chair as a form of execution.
- Frank Moto, 26, white, Aug. 29, 1921
- Sylvester Brown, 27, Black, Sept. 9, 1921
- Andrew Davy, 38, white, Sept. 20, 1921
- John Cooper, 42, Black, Sept. 30, 1921
- Arthur Harding, 38, Black, Feb. 24, 1922
- Walter Wright, 28, white, March 1, 1922
- Harry Bland, 27, white, March 1, 1922
- Leroy Tyler, 34, Black, March 3, 1922
- John McGuire, 30, white, March 3, 1922
- Roy Champlin, 27, white, March 25, 1922
- John Vaiden, 26, Black, May 5, 1922
- George Bush, 41, Black, May 5, 1922
- Samuel Purpera, 19, white May 9, 1922
- Dominic Benigno, 26, white, June 14, 1922
- John Gackenbach, 21, white, June 20, 1922
- Steve Myeskie, 22, white, June 23, 1922
- Ludie Shelton, 24, Black, Jan 26, 1923
- Charles Habig, 32, white, Feb. 16, 1923
- Charles Arnold, 64, white, March 2, 1923
- Henry White, 41, Black, March 2, 1923
- Stanley Forbes, 27, white, April 13, 1923
- Noble Holt, 27, white, April 27, 1923
- James Wellions, 40, Black, July 13, 1923
- Adam Roberts, 41, Black, Sept. 6, 1923
- Irvin Layer, 38, white, Nov. 2, 1923
- John Karayians, 33, white, Dec. 8, 1923
- Edward Long, 23, white, Jan. 4, 1924
- John Nelson, 28, Black, Feb. 1, 1924
- Mike Sipcich, 56, white, Feb. 8, 1924
- William Hollis, 24, Black, March 28, 1924
- Clem Head, 31, Black, April 15, 1924
- Charles Brooks, 52, Black, April 28, 1924
- Louis Rossi, 35, white, April 29, 1924
- Vincenzo Caparra, 33, white, June 24, 1924
- James Avant, 41, Black, Dec. 5, 1924
- Alexander Kuszik, 19, white, Dec. 12, 1924
- Joseph Kane, 21, white, Jan. 9, 1925
In 1972, the United States Supreme Court declared the death penalty to be unconstitutional. Although Ohio reinstated the death penalty in 1974, it did not resume executions until 1999 and none chose to use the electric chair.
On November 15, 2001, Governor Bob Taft signed House Bill 362 eliminating the electric chair as a form of execution.
On February 26, 2002, Ohio’s electric chair was decommissioned and finally disconnected from service. The original electric chair was donated to the Ohio Historical Society on December 18, 2002, and a replica electric chair was donated to the Mansfield Reformatory Preservation Society.
As of 2022, the only method of execution in Ohio is lethal injection.
-30-
No comments:
Post a Comment