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For nineteen-year-old Celia, a
slave on a Missouri farm, five years of being repeatedly raped by her
middle-aged owner was enough. On the night of June 23, 1855, she
would later tell a reporter, "the Devil got into me" and Celia fatally
clubbed her master as he approached her in her cabin. The murder
trial of the slave Celia, coming at a time when the controversy over
the issue of slavery reached new heights, raised fundamental questions
about the rights of slaves to fight back against the worst of slavery's
abuses.
Background
and the Crime
Around 1820, Robert Newsom and his family left Virginia and headed
west, finally settling land along the Middle River in southern
Callaway
County, Missouri. By 1850 (according to the census), Newsom
owned
eight-hundred acres of land and livestock that included horses, milk
cows, beef cattle, hogs, sheep, and two oxen. Like the majority of Callaway
County farmers, Newsom also owned slaves--five male slaves as of 1850.
During the summer of 1850, Newsom purchased from a slave owner in neighboring
Audrain County a sixth slave, a fourteen-year-old
girl named Celia. Shortly after returning with Celia to his farm,
Newsom raped her. For female slaves, rape was an "ever present
threat" and, far too often, a reality. Over the next five years,
Newsom would make countless treks to Celia's slave cabin, located in a
grove of fruit trees some distance from his main house, and demand sex
from the teenager he considered his concubine. Celia gave birth
to two children between 1851 and 1855, the second being the son of
Robert Newsom.
Sometime before 1855, a real lover, another one of Newsom's slaves
named George, entered Celia's life. On several occasions, George
"stayed" at Celia's cabin, although whether for a few hours or an
entire night is unknown. In late winter, either February or early
March, of 1855, Celia again became pregnant. The pregnancy
affected George, and caused him to insist that Celia put an end to the
pattern of sexual exploitation by Newsom that continued to that
time. George informed Celia that "he would have nothing more to
do with her if she did not quit the old man" [trial testimony of
Jefferson Jones].
Celia approached Newsom's daughters, Virginia and Mary, asking their
help in getting Newsom "to quit forcing her while she was sick."
It is not clear whether either of the Newsom daughters made any attempt
to intervene on Celia's behalf, but it is known that the sexual
assaults continued. In desperation, Celia begged Newsom to leave
her alone, at least through her pregnancy, but the slave owner was
unreceptive to her pleas.
On June 23, 1855, Newsom told Celia "he was coming to her cabin that
night." Around 10 P.M., Newsom
left his bedroom and walked the fifty yards to Celia's brick
cabin. When Newsom told Celia it was time for sex, she retreated
to a corner of the cabin. He advanced toward her. Celia
then grabbed a stick placed there earlier in the day. Celia
raised the stick, "about as large as the upper part of a Windsor chair,
but not so long," and struck her master hard over the head.
Newsom groaned and "sunk down on a stool or towards the floor."
Celia clubbed Newsom over the head a second time, killing him [testimony
of Jefferson Jones].
After making sure "he was dead," Celia spent an hour or so pondering
her next step. Finally she decided to burn Newsom's body in her
fireplace. She went outside to gather staves and used them to
build a raging fire. Then she dragged the corpse over to the
fireplace and pushed it into the flames. She kept the fire going
through the night. In the early morning, she gathered up bone
fragments from the ashes and smashed them against the hearth stones,
then threw the particles back into the fireplace. A few larger
pieces of bone she put "under the hearth, and under the floor between a
sleeper and the fireplace." Shortly before daybreak, Celia
carried some of the ashes out into the yard and then went to bed.
In the morning, as Newsom's family was growing concerned about Robert's
disappearance, Celia enlisted the help of Newsom's grandson, Coffee
Waynescot, in shoveling ashes out of her fireplace and into a
bucket. Coffee testified later he decided to help when the slave
said "she would give me two dozen walnuts if I would carry the ashes
out; I said good lick." Following Celia's instruction, Coffee
distributed the remains of his grandfather along a path leading to the
stables.
Investigation
and Inquest
On the morning of the 24th,
Virginia Newsom searched for her father in along nearby creek banks and
coves, fearing he might have drowned. By mid-morning, the search
party grew to include several neighbors and Newsom's son, Harry.
After fruitless hours of searching, suspicion began to turn to George,
who--it was thought--might have been motivated to kill Newsom out of
jealousy. William Powell, owner both of slaves and an adjoining
160-acre farm, questioned George. George denied any knowledge of
what might have happened to Newsom, but then added--suspiciously--"it
was not worth while to hunt for him any where except close to the
house." Faced with, most likely, severe threats, George
eventually provided an additional damning bit of information. He
told Powell "he believed the last walking [Newsom] had done was along
the path, pointing to the path leading from the house to the Negro
cabin." George's comment immediately led investigators to the
conclusion that Newsom had been killed in Celia's cabin.
When a search of Celia's cabin failed to turn up Newsom's body, Powell
and the others located Celia doing her regular duties in the kitchen of
the Newsom home. Powell falsely claimed that George had told the
search party that "she knew where her master was," hoping this approach
might prompt a quick confession from Celia. Instead, Celia denied
any knowledge of her master's fate. Faced with escalating
threats, including the threat of having her children taken away from
her,
Celia continued to insist on her innocence. (She undoubtedly
understood that confessing to the murder of her master would be an even
more serious threat to her relationship with her children.)
Eventually, however, Celia admitted that Newsom had indeed visited her
cabin seeking sex the previous night. She insisted that Newsom
never entered her cabin, but rather that she struck him as he leaned
inside the window and "he fell back outside and she saw nothing more of
him." Finally, after refusing "for some time to tell anything more,"
Celia
promised to tell more if Powell would "send two men [Newsom's two sons]
out of the room." When Harry and David left, Celia confessed to
the murder of Robert Newsom.
Following Celia's confession, the search party located Newsom's ashes
along the path to the stables. They also gathered bits of bones
from Celia's fireplace, larger bone fragments from under the hearth
stone, and Newsom's burnt buckle, buttons, and blackened
pocketknife. The collected items were placed in a box for display
during the inquest that was to come.
Acting on an affidavit filed by David
Newsom, the case of State of
Missouri v Celia, a Slave
commenced. Two justices of the peace, six local residents
comprising an inquest jury, and three
summoned witnesses all assembled
at the Newsom residence on the morning of June 25. William Powell
testified first, providing the jurors with an account of his
interrogation of Celia the day before. Twelve-year-old Coffee Waynescot
told jurors of Celia's request that he distribute what turned out to be
his grandfather's ashes along the path. The third and last
witness was Celia, who reaffirmed
that she killed Newsom, but insisted
that "she did not intend to kill him when she struck him, but only
wanted to hurt him." The inquest
jury quickly determined that
probable cause existed that Celia feloniously and willfully murdered
Robert Newsom, and the slave girl was ordered taken to the Callaway
County jail in Fulton, nine miles to the north of the Newsom farm.
Doubts as to whether Celia could have pulled off her crime without help
lingered, and Callaway County Sheriff William Snell allowed two men,
Jefferson Jones and Thomas Shoatman, to conduct further questioning of
Celia in her jail cell. Celia added some additional detail to her
original story, describing the history of rape and sexual exploitation
that began soon after her arrival on the Newsom farm, but she
continued to deny that George played any role in Newsom's death or the
disposal of his body.
The
Trial of Celia
Celia's trial came at a time of
heightened tensions over the issue of slavery. In 1854, Congress
had passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri
Compromise of 1820 and allowed settlers in those territories to decide
for themselves whether to permit slavery within their boundaries.
Northern opposition to the new law led to the establishment of the
Republican Party and to campaigns by both pro-slavery and anti-slavery
groups to influence the outcomes of elections in Kansas. Some
prominent Missouri figures, such as
U. S. Senator David Atchinson and University of Missouri President
James Shannon, encouraged their slave-state residents to counter the
efforts of abolitionists who were moving to Kansas in the hope of
keeping it slave-free. Proslavery mobs of Missourians attacked
both Free-Soil voters in Kansans and threatened fellow Missourians who
dared to criticize their bullying tactics. By the summer of 1855,
Missouri was awash with proslavery rhetoric and increasingly active
vigilante groups organized to ensure Kansas would enter the Union as a
slave state. On October 6, three days before the start of Celia's
trial, John
Brown arrived in a Kansas that contained two state
legislatures, one supporting Kansas's admission as a free state and one
enacting slave laws. On Missouri's western border, the
possibility of civil war seemed real.
The political implications of Celia's trial could not have escaped
Circuit Court Judge William Hall. Certainly, he knew, proslavery
Missourians expected Celia to hang. Hall's choice as Celia's
defense attorney, John Jameson, was a safe one. Jameson's
reputation as a competent, genial member of the bar and his lack of
involvement in the heated slavery debates (despite being a slave owner
himself) ensured that his selection would not be seriously
contested. Jameson could provide the defendant with
satisfactory--but not too
satisfactory--representation. In addition, Hall appointed two
young lawyers, Isaac Boulware and Nathan Kouns, to assist Jameson in
his defense.
Celia's jurors, of course, were all male. They ranged in age from
thirty-four to seventy-five and, with one exception, were married with
children. All were farmers. Several were slave owners.
The prosecution's first witness, Jefferson
Jones, described his conversation with Celia in the Callaway County
jail. He told jurors Celia's account of the murder and how she
had disposed of the body. On cross-examination, Jameson
questioned Jones about what Celia had said about the sexual nature of
her relationship to the deceased. Jones testified that he had
"heard" Newsom raped her soon after her purchase from an Audrain County
farmer--and that Celia told him that Newsom had continued to demand sex
in the five years that followed. Jones also acknowledged that
Celia had told him that she "did not intend to kill" Newsom, "only to
hurt him."
Virginia Waynescot,
Newsom's eldest daughter, testified next. She described the
search for her father on direct examination, testifying, "I hunted on
all of the paths and walks and every place for him," including "caves
and along the creeks," but "I found no trace of him."
Virginia faced questioning on
cross-examination concerning Celia's possible motive for the
killing. She admitted that Celia became pregnant ("took sick") in
February "and had been sick ever since"-- too sick even to cook for the
Newsom.
After Coffee Waynescot described
for jurors his unknowing dumping of
his grandfather's ashes, William
Powell took the stand. Jameson
cross-examined Powell vigorously, gaining admissions from the search
party leader that he had threatened Celia with the loss of her children
and with hanging to obtain her confession. Powell also testified
that Celia had complained that Newsom repeatedly demanded sex and that
the slave girl had approached other Newsom family members in a vain
attempt to stop the rapes. Powell also admitted that Celia told
him that her attack on Newsom came from desperation and that she only
intended to injure, not kill, her master. After Powell's
testimony, the prosecution called two
doctors who identified the bone
fragments found in Celia's cabin as those from an adult human.
Following the doctors' testimony, the state rested its case.
Dr. James Martin, a
Fulton physician, testified first for the
defense. (Celia, as a slave, was not called as a witness.
Under the existing law in Missouri and most other states, a criminal
defendant could not--under "the interested party rule"--testify.)
Jameson posed for Martin questions designed to suggest that Celia was
incapable of committing the alleged crime without the aid of another
person. The defense attorney asked whether a human body could be
so completely destroyed in a simple fireplace in a span of only six or
so hours, but the question met with a prosecution objection, which
Judge Hall sustained. Jameson tried rephrasing the question a
couple of different ways (e.g., "What, in your opinion as a scientific
physician, would be the time required to destroy an adult human
body?"), but fared no better with the objections and was forced to
abandon that line of questioning.
The second and last defense witness, Thomas
Shoatman, testified that,
during her jail house interview, Celia had said that after she struck
Newsom the first time he "he threw his hand up to catch her." The
judge, however, again sustained a prosecution objection to the
testimony, and jurors were instructed to ignore the evidence that
suggested the second and fatal blow came only after Celia was
physically threatened. Satisfied, perhaps, that the jury had at
least heard the reasons for Celia's desperate act, Jameson rested his
case.
Judge Hall's jury
instructions made an acquittal all but
impossible. He rejected all nine proposed defense instructions
that addressed the question of motive or degree of culpability.
Among those thrown out were instructions that would have allowed the
jury to return a "not guilty" verdict if the jury believed that Celia
killed Newsom in an attempt to fight off his sexual advances. The
defense, for example, proposed that the jury be told that they could
acquit Celia on a self-defense theory if she believed she was "in
imminent danger of forced sexual intercourse." Instead of
suggesting any viable self-defense argument, Hall instructed jurors
that "the defendant had no right to kill [Newsom] because he came into
her cabin and was talking to her about having intercourse with her or
anything else." Given the threat the defense's proposed
instructions presented to established understandings concerning the
very minimal rights of slaves, Hall's pro-prosecution instructions
should have come as no surprise. Neither, it is likely, was
anyone in the Callaway County courthouse surprised when, on October 10,
the jury quickly convicted Celia of first-degree
murder.
Celia's attorneys appeared again in court the next day to move for a
new trial, based on Judge Hall's evidentiary rulings during the
proceeding and his allegedly erroneous instructions. Judge Hall
took twenty-four hours to consider the defense motion, then rejected it
and sentenced Celia to be "hanged by the neck until dead on the
sixteenth day of November 1855." The defense motion that it be
allowed to appeal the judge's ruling to the Missouri Supreme Court was
granted.
Epilogue
In jail awaiting her execution,
Celia delivered a stillborn child. As the date for her execution
approached, still no word had come from Jefferson City on her appeal
filed in the Missouri Supreme Court. The possibility that she
might be hanged before her appeal was decided seemed ever more real to
Celia's defense team and whoever else she might count among her
supporters. Something had to be done.
On November 11, five days before her scheduled date with the gallows,
Celia and another inmate were removed from the Callaway County jail,
either with the assistance or the knowledge of her defense
lawyers. The defense team, in a letter to Supreme Court Justice
Abiel Leonard written less than a month after her escape, noted that
Celia "was taken out [of jail] by someone" and that they felt "more
than ordinary interest in behalf of the girl Celia" owing to the
circumstances of her act. Celia was returned to jail--by whom it
is not known--in late November, only after her scheduled execution date
had passed. Following her return, Judge Hall set a new execution
date of December 21--a date, the defense hoped, that would give the
Supreme Court time to issue its decision on their appeal.
The Supreme Court ruled against
Celia in her appeal. In their
December 14 order, the state justices said they "thought it proper to
refuse the prayer of the petitioner," having found "no probable cause
for her appeal." The stay of execution, the justices wrote, is
"refused."
Celia was interviewed for a final time in her cell on the evening
before her execution. Again, she denied that "anyone assisted
her...or abetted her in any way." She told her interrogator, as
reported in the Fulton Telegraph,
"as soon as I struck him the Devil got into me, and I struck him with a
stick until he was dead, and then rolled him into the fire and burnt
him up." Celia died on the gallows at 2:30 P.M.
on December 21, 1855.
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