Special Term of Court
Probable. . . W. Foster Parsons Confesses to Slaying of Joe Wilson. Special
Term of Court Asked for to be Held Not Later Than First Monday in October. Is
Parsons of Sound Mind?
Solicitor Bruck sent a request to the Governor’s office
Wednesday, asking that a special term of court be called for Richmond county
not later than the first Monday in October for the purpose of trying W. Foster
Parsons, charged with the death of Duck Phillips and Joe Wilson.
The Post-Dispatch called the Governor’s office by long
distance this (Thursday) afternoon at 4:30 o’clock to learn whether the request
had been acted upon. The Governor is out West, but his Private Secretary, Mr.
Sandford Martin, informed the editor that the letter containing the request had
not be at that hour received, but that when it does reach his office, he will
act upon it immediately. He stated that a special term will be called, provided
a judge can be found who is not engaged.
As the Post-Dispatch went to press on Thursday afternoon of
last week, the identification of the dead bones found near Keyser earlier in
the day as being those of Joe Wilson, colored jitney driver of Hamlet, was made
complete. It was intimated in the paper that W. Foster Parsons, a white man
aged 23, might be connected with the disappearance and death of Wilson. Since
last Thursday developments followed rapidly, culminating with the confession by
Parsons on Friday.
Parsons had been placed in jail in Rockingham Monday, Aug.
25th, having been bound over to court by the Hamlet Recorder under $750
bond charged with larceny and receiving, at that time he being accused only of
the theft of a car driven by Joe Wilson. Investigation during the next day or
so tended to connect him with the theft of the Duck Phillips car on Aug. 1st
(when Phillips was killed) and then after Joe Wilson’s bones were found on
Thursday, the circumstantial evidence was made very strong. Confronted with the
evidence in jail on last Friday morning, Parsons confessed, the substance of
his confession as made to Sheriff McDonald and Jailor Bean being as follows:
He admitted killing Joe Wilson but denied killing Duck
Phillips. He said that on the night of July 31st, he and a white man
named James Hammock came from Durham to Hamlet. That they hired a jitney
driver, Duck Phillips, to drive them up the road; that when they got near
Hoffman, Hammock, who was sitting on the front seat, suddenly reached over,
pulled the driver to him and shot him through the back of the head; that
Hammock then dragged the body to the woods, and shot him again, as he still
showed signs of life. That Hammock then returned to the car, and the two
proceeded on to Durham. That next morning he (Parsons) sold the car for $250
and later in the day met Hammock at the depot and gave him half, $125. That he
has not seen Hammock since.
He (Parsons) said he later came to Hamlet Aug. 20th,
next morning hired Joe Wilson and that when near Keyser he shot Wilson through the
back of the head from the rear seat. He then dragged the body from the car, and
driving on toward Aberdeen, stopped, before reaching that town, beside the road
and went to sleep. That some one passed in the afternoon and woke him and that
he then drove on to Durham.
He appears to remember only disconnectedly, and he says he
was drinking on both occasions. When asked why he did it, he simply replied, “I
don’t know.”
The foregoing in brief covers his confession.
It is thought by many people that his mind must be impaired,
for, reason many, surely no person in his right mind could perpetrate such crimes.
Parsons is a white man, the son of the late Allen Parsons of
Black Jack township, Richmond county. He was married to a Miss Thomas last
Spring. More recently he has been working in Durham county, about 8 miles from
Durham.
A detailed story of the two crimes, each interwoven with the
other, makes intensely interesting reading. The Post-Dispatch in its constant
endeavor to be “on the job,” is giving this big story to the public in the form
of an EXTRA, the special issue appearing this (Friday) afternoon on the streets
at 4 o’clock—only a few hours after the confession.
Joe Wilson Killed
Boiled down, a history of the killing of Joe Wilson,
colored, is as follows, as pieced together by Chief Braswell:
On Wednesday night a week ago, Aug. 20th, Mr.
Parsons came to Hamlet from Durham and registered at the Terminal hotel.
Thursday morning it is said he hired Joe Wilson, a colored boy about 16 years
old, to drive him to Childress Store near Hannah Pickett. They returned to
Hamlet about 10 o’clock, and then Parsons hired the boy to carry him to Cognac.
At this juncture, a boy named George Ross asked the boy to let him rid as far
as Pine street, so he could deliver some clothes. This Wilson agreed to do;
when Ross got out at Pine street, he remarked to Wilson that if he would wait
till he delivered the clothes he would go with him to Cognac. So the boy
delivered the clothes, but when he returned to the car, the driver told him
that he couldn’t go as he would have a load coming back. Evidently, Parsons had
spoken to him in the meantime. A citizen of Hoffman saw the car with Wilson and
Parsons in it pass that town about 11 or thereabouts. He identified Parsons by
a fancy shirt he wore. That is the last seen of the two together.
On Thursday morning, Aug. 28th, a young white man
carrying a load of tobacco to Aberdeen saw a big flock of buzzards hovering to
the left of a short-cut road about a mile and a half from Keyser, and upon investigating
they found the bones of a human being. They gave the alarm and officers form
Hamlet and the Sheriff from Rockingham went there, as did also the officers of
Moore county, the spot being about two miles within the Moore county line. All
the flesh was eaten from the body, the bones picked clean and only a bit of
flesh remained in the shoes, the buzzards making strenuous efforts to get even
that bit. The clothes were scattered about, blackened. Sheriff McDonald, after viewing
the bones, brought the clothes to Hamlet, and interviewed the mother of Joe
Wilson with the view of connecting Joe with the dead body. The mother said he
had a yellowish shirt, black pointed shoes, which corresponded with the clothes
found.
So much for the dead body.
On Friday morning of last week, Mr. Vernon Allen, manager for
Hinson Bros. garage at Hamlet, informed Chief Braswell that the car driven by
Joe Wilson had disappeared. Chief thereupon went to Aberdeen Friday hunting a
trace of it. Saturday morning he got Mr. Allen and they decided to drive
towards Raleigh in search of it. And just here is how remarkably events
happened. They reached Sanford Saturday afternoon, and finding no trace,
started on towards Moncure. When about a mile from Sanford, and traveling about
20 miles an hour, they met and passed another car containing a man and two
women, the other car going about 25 miles. Allen in a glance recognized his
car, as well as the numbers! Quickly Braswell stopped, turned around and sped
back towards Sanford. By another streak of luck, a freight was standing across
the street, and this held up the Parsons car, for such it turned out to be.
Approaching Parsons, Chief asked him where he got it. He said “in Durham” and
that he paid $250. A Sanford officer then arrested him and he was lodged in
jail. This was about 5 o’clock Saturday afternoon. Chief quizzed him in jail,
and then placing handcuffs on him told him he was going to carry him to Durham
to find the man from whom he said he bought the car. Parsons thereupon told him
he hadn’t told the truth, that for a face he and the negro Wilson had conspired
to steal the car, that when they got to Durham he had given the negro $50 for
his interest in the car and that the negro had then gone to Greensboro. Chief
then brought Parsons to Hamlet where he remained in the lockup until a hearing
was given him before Recorder Austin the 25th. The Recorder bound
him to Superior Court under a $750 bond, which he was unable to give, and he
was lodged in jail. The charge against him was larceny and receiving.
On Thursday, the 28th, Messrs. L.W.P. Webb and
E.A. Waddell came from Rockingham and arranged to give the required bond.
Sheriff McDonald was about to release him, was within a few minutes of doing
so, when he received the following telegram from Chief Braswell from Durham:
“Hold Parsons without bail. New and strong evidence
developed. –J.S. Braswell.”
The wire of course kept Parsons in jail.
In the meantime after committing Parsons to jail Monday,
Chief Braswell went to Greensboro in search of the negro and then went to
Durham. And here is where another remarkable part comes in. He was sitting in a
car on Main street at noon Wednesday eating a lunch, when he noticed a Ford
pass, and his trained eye observed that it had two new fenders and a new
running board on the left side. This corresponded with the car stolen from
Hamlet Aug. 1st (details of which appear further down, and for which
Parsons was connected in the killing of Duck Phillips.) Chief hastened after
the car, but it had disappeared. He then went to R.E. Dillard’s garage, simply
strolling about on the lookout, when by another strange chance a man drove up
in an Oakland and told the garage people he wanted to swap it for a Ford. The
Dillard people brought out the Sharp Ford (Sharpe, the owner in Hamlet from
whom the first Ford was stolen,) and as soon as Braswell saw it he called an
officer and a trade was forbidden. Chief wired M.R. Sharpe at Hamlet to come to
Durham at once to identify his car. This Sharpe did Aug. 28th, and
for that reason Braswell wired Sheriff McDonald at once to hold Parsons without
bail.
Braswell then came to Rockingham next day, and upon
interviewing Parsons in the jail cell, Parsons admitted killing Joe Wilson and
taking the car. He denied killing the first negro, Duck Phillips, and says that
a white man named James Hammock of Virginia and who he met in Durham, while he
himself was seated on the rear seat and took no part. However, he says he sold
the car next day for $250 and according to agreement divided half ($125) with
Hammock. This, he claims, was the last he saw of Hammock. The next job, the Joe
Wilson killing and car theft, was done entirely by himself, he says.
He said he had not planned the killing of Joe Wilson when he
left Hamlet, that a notion simply came to him on the spur of the moment. He
said he had no words with the driver. He also said he was drinking.
Duck Phillips Killed
Now that Parsons has confessed, the mystery surrounding the
death of Duck Phillips comes to light.
On the night of Friday, Aug. 1st, Duck Phillips,
a colored man aged about 33 who drives a jitney for M.R. Sharpe of Hamlet,
carried Mr. Sharpe home about 8:30 o’clock. At 9 o’clock a passenger, Parsons
it now developed, hired him for a trip. Nothing further was seen of Duck until
the following Monday morning when a section hand, stepping out into the bushes
near the Gates farm between Hoffman and Marston, discovered a terrible odor and
following it found the dead body of Duck, about a hundred yards from the public
road. A bullet hole was through the left side of the head and a hole in the
chest. Signs showed the body had been dragged from the road to the spot, and a disturbance
of the ground indicated that the man was not quite dead when dragged there, as
the foot stirred up the earth as if in a death sporadic kick. A coroner’s
inquest was held, the verdict being that he came to his death at the hands of
unknown party or parties.
The car had disappeared, and no clue was available as to who
killed Duck or what became of the car, until Chief Braswell saw the car pass
him in Durham Wednesday at noon.
And now for a history of that Duck Phillips car. It seems
that after killing Duck, Parsons drove the car to Durham. Next morning,
Saturday, Aug. 2nd, a Mr. E.D. Woody, a contractor at Durham, was in
Dillard’s garage and was approached about 9:30 by a stranger who remarked that
he had a car to sell him about which he was speaking the week before. Woody
replied that the man was mistaken, as he had never seen him. (Parsons was evidently
mistaking Woody for O.D. Barber; they resemble.) The man, Parsons, then told
him he had a car he wanted to sell, that it was given him by a farmer on a
debt, and that it had no encumbrance, etc. Parsons then carried Woody to Mangum
street to see it, claiming that he could not drive a car himself. The upshot
was that Woody bought the car for $250 and an hour later sold it to R.E.
Dillard for $340. Woody paid Parsons $200 cash and a check for $50, with the
bill of sale.
The foregoing, in brief, is a history of the Duck Phillips
car.
Trial
Parsons will be tried in Richmond county Superior Court for
the killing of Duck Phillips, and if tried for the Joe Wilson murder he would
be tried at Carthage in Moore county, since Wilson was killed in Moore.
Men from Durham
E.D. Woody, to whom Parsons sold the first car, was in
Rockingham last Friday and had Parsons sign a mortgage, securing him for the amount
he had paid him for the car. It seems that R.E. Dillard of Durham has a first
mortgage on Parsons’ two horses and five mules. These animals were shipped by
Mr. Parsons to Yatesville, Ga., where he intended toing last week to either
saw-mill or grade.
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