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Daniel
WILKINSON
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
To avoid arrest
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: September 4, 1883
Date of arrest:
6 days after
Date of birth: 1845
Victim profile:
Constable William Lawrence, 63
Method of murder:
Shooting (.32 caliber
revolver)
Location: Bath, Maine, USA
Status:
Executed by hanging
at the Maine State Prison in Thomaston on November 21, 1885
Daniel Wilkinson (c. 1845 – November 21,
1885) was the last person to be executed by Maine. He was hanged for
the murder of a police officer after a burglary in Bath, Maine.
In the early morning hours of September 4, 1883,
Wilkinson and his accomplice John Ewitt were caught attempting to
break into the D.C. Gould Ship Chandlery and Provision Store in Bath.
As Wilkinson and Ewitt were running away from one police officer, they
collided with Constable William Lawrence. Wilkinson immediately shot
Lawrence in the head with a .32 caliber revolver.
Wilkinson was arrested in Bangor, Maine less than a
week after the incident and was charged with murder on September 11,
1883. It was discovered that Wilkinson was an escapee from the Maine
State Prison. Ewitt had travelled to England; his extradition was
never sought by Maine. Wilkinson's trial began in the Bath Superior
Court on January 4, 1884. He was convicted by the jury of first degree
murder on January 7, 1884 and was sentenced by the judge to death by
hanging.
The death sentence was carried out at the Maine
State Prison in Thomaston on November 21, 1885. Wilkinson did not die
instantly from the hanging but slowly died of strangulation. The
nature of Wilkinson's death, which was similar to the executions of
two other inmates the previous April, was used by anti-death penalty
activists to argue that Maine should abolish the death penalty, which
it did in 1887.
Wikipedia.org
Fallen Officer
Officer William Lawrence
On the night of September 4, 1883, shortly after
midnight, Bath Police Officer Kingsley, a ‘rookie’ of only two months,
was checking doors along his downtown beat in the shipbuilding
community of Bath, Maine. As he walked along Commercial Street he
heard "the sound of splintering wood". Because the gas street lamps
had been extinguished earlier in the evening, he was unable to clearly
see anyone. As Officer Kingsley neared a storefront on Broad street he
shouted "What’s going on there?" He suddenly heard running footsteps
and ordered the fleeing suspects to stop. When they did not stop he
fired a warning shot: "I blew my whistle when they ran and called out
for them to stop or I’d shoot. The hind man turned his head around and
said ‘ you wouldn’t shoot would you?’ I told the two to stop. Two as I
thought went up Arch Street and the other went on. When I got to the
corner I sang out again ‘Stop or I’ll shoot!’ There was no answer and
I fired".
The suspects, who had attempted to break into D.C.
Gould Ship Chandlery and Provision Store, hastily made their escape
but not before killing a patrolman on the beat adjacent to Officer
Kingsley’s. Constable William Lawrence, affectionately known to the
townspeople as "Uncle Billy" had been patrolling the Front Street area
when one of the burglars ran directly into his arms. This meeting
caught both the burglar, Daniel Wilkinson, and Officer Lawrence off
guard. In his desperation to escape, Wilkinson shoved a .32 caliber
revolver into the face of Officer Lawrence and fired. The bullet,
according to the autopsy report, entered Officer Lawrence’s brain and
killed him instantly. Officer Lawrence did not even have an
opportunity to draw his own weapon.
At age 63, "Uncle Billy" was a "most respected
member of the police force" and the townsfolk were deeply affected by
his death. At first, people accused rookie officer Kingsley of
accidentally shooting Officer Lawrence in his haste to apprehend the
burglars. This theory was disproved however when a private detective,
hired by the town to investigate the murder, arrested and obtained a
confession to the crime from Daniel Wilkinson. The Police Chief at the
time, Marshall James Bailey, recommended that Detective James Wood of
Boston be employed since his own department was not equipped to handle
a homicide investigation.
Wood was paid ten dollars a day plus expenses for
his services and refused a one thousand dollar reward offered by City
Mayor James Ledyard. The reward was for evidence that would lead to
the arrest and conviction of any person or persons who caused the
death of Police Officer William Lawrence. Wood declined the reward
claiming that the reward could prejudice a jury.
It took Detective Wood only a matter of days to
apprehend Wilkinson. Wilkinson was arraigned on September 11, 1883,
one week after the murder of Officer Lawrence. Wilkinson’s accomplice,
an Englishman named John Ewitt, who had no part in the actual murder,
successfully escaped to England and was not extradited due to a recent
treaty agreement between the two nations. Wood had tracked Wilkinson
by following a lead developed in Portland, Maine. According to
Detective Wood’s actual notes, he had been routinely checking
Portland’s boarding houses. One landlady advised Wood that she had not
heard from two of her boarders and still had their possessions. Upon
checking their belongings, Wood found unusual shaped match sticks that
resembled those recently found at the scene of a burglary in
Brunswick, Maine, a town only a few miles south of Bath. He had
determined that the Brunswick burglary and the attempted break in Bath
were alike in too many ways to ignore and concluded that the both
crimes were committed by the same individual. This led Detective Wood
to Bangor, Maine, where he subsequently arrested Wilkinson.
Wilkinson, who was 38 years of age, was tried and
convicted of first degree murder on January 7, 1884. According to
Detective Wood’s accounts, Wilkinson’s council, a young attorney named
Herbert Heath, was "most able" but the defendant was nonetheless
sentenced to death after a Bath Superior Court trial that lasted only
four days. Wilkinson was hung on November 21, 1885 at the Maine State
Prison. Because Wilkinson did not immediately succumb when dropped
from the gallows, and instead died an agonizing death, he was the last
person to die by this means in Maine. The death penalty was abolished
altogether in Maine in 1887.