Patrick Eugene Joseph Prendergast (April 18,
1868 – July 14, 1894) was the assassin of Chicago Mayor Carter
Harrison, Sr.
Background
Prendergast was born in Ireland. His grandfather
was reported to have died insane while his mother had "repeated
attacks of hysterics" and his father died of consumption. At the age
of 4 Prendergast was reported to have suffered a severe head injury
from a fall, from which he was unconscious for a long period of time
and suffered vomiting for four weeks after. He was described as a
peculiar child, solitary, irritable and excitable, with a poor memory
who did poorly in school. He left home at 16 because of imaginary
persecution and by 18 had developed grandiose ideas of his
capabilities and became a fanatic for the single-tax promoted by Henry
George.
Prendergast became a newspaper distributor in
Chicago, where he lobbied for improvements in Chicago's railroad grade
crossings, which he saw as a danger to the public. In 1893, he
supported Harrison's reelection campaign under the delusion that if
Harrison won the election, Prendergast would receive an appointment as
Corporation Counsel.
Murder
When the appointment did not come, Prendergast
visited Harrison at his home on October 28, 1893, admitted by a maid
who went to wake the mayor. As Harrison was leaving the room where he
had been sleeping, Prendergast approached and shot the mayor three
times with a .38 revolver and escaped, firing once at a coachman whom
he encountered. Harrison did not know who Prendergast was.
Prendergast surrendered at Des Plaines Street
police station 30 minutes later. He still had the gun in his
possession. When interviewed by police, he gave varying stories as to
his motive, including the failed appointment and the mayor's failure
to elevate train track crossings. The smell of burned powder and empty
chambers reaffirmed the police department of his actions.
In his first trial, Prendergast's attorney tried to
have him found insane. Several doctors testified that while
Prendergast was paranoid, he knew right from wrong and was capable of
standing trial for the murder. Clarence Darrow later won a hearing on
Prendergast's sanity, but it also failed. Prendergast was hanged on
July 14, 1894 in Chicago.
Media depictions
On occasion, Prendergast has been represented in
film or fiction. In the 1991 made-for-TV movie Darrow, he was
portrayed by New York-born actor Paul Klementowicz. Prendergast's
story is one of the sub-plots in Erik Larson's book The Devil in the
White City.
Wikipedia.org
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