Why Was Peter McQueen Shot in the Middle of the Road?

Note: all typos and grammatical mistakes are original to the article.

 

The Memphis Daily Argus

Wednesday, April 25, 1866

Page Two

 

From the Interior—No. 18.

Holly Springs Intelligence – Captain Fort – Change of Feelings – A new Version of the Homicide of Cohen – The Story of McQueen – A Celebrated Will Case – Singular Eccentricities of Peter McQueen – Crazy or Demoniacal – Etc., Etc.

 

“On the Wing” Toward North Alabama near Grand Junction, April 24, 1866.}

 

I have just obtained, through a reliable friend, the following budget of intelligence – including the wonderful “McQueen Story” – from Holly Springs. The celebrated Captain Fort is in prison at that place, awaiting his trail for the killing of Cohen, a groom or clerk in the livery stable of Mr. Jim House, of that place. Nearly the whole bar of that “city” – and an able one it is – has been retained for the defence; and there does not now appear to be half so much feeling against Fort among the people as there was at first. It is now understood that the Captain was in a state of almost unconscious, certainly irresponsible, intoxication at the time he committed the fatal deed; that he had that evening had a falling out with House, who had threatened to turn his horse out of the livery stable, and during Fort’s absence in quest of a pistol, did take the horse out and hitch him to the fence hard-by; that Fort, returning and finding that the threat had been carried out, drew his pistol and commenced firing upon Cohen, the only person in the stable at the time, thinking it was House; and so unintentionally killed a man with whom he had no quarrel. My informant says it is now generally believed that Captain Fort thought he was shooting at House; and that although this does not excuse him, yet it takes away some of the more atrocious features the case at first presented in the current reports, for the reason that House is a man quite able and always prepared to defend himself, and was the party with whom Fort was quarreling, and was expecting a difficulty; whereas Cohen was a perfectly harmless individual, and, only a moment before, was on the best of terms with Fort. Certainly, (continues my informant,) whatever view the law may take of it, there was no ‘moral’ malice in the heart of Fort against the man who fell by his hand; for, so far as Cohen was concerned, it was an accident – a mistake – the blind blunder of an excessively drunk man….Capt. Fort is reported to have many friends who sympathize with him in the great misfortune which has come upon him through the too free use of spirits, and they are raising a sum of money by the subscription to pay his lawyers’ fees and other expenses incident to imprisonment and a trial for his life. Many of you readers will doubtless remember the Captain as the son of one of the early settlers of Hardeman county – a gentleman who formerly lived on the stage road five miles North of Bolivar but is now, I believe, a resident of De Soto county, (Miss.) He paid a visit to his son in prison last week, at Holly Springs. Capt. Fort was educated for the bar; and, with all his reputation – as a rough, stern, partisan fighter, is a man of considerable culture and fine native powers of mind. He was practicing law in Arkansas at the breaking out of the war, and, though not liable to military duty on account of “club-feet,” he immediately ranged himself under the banner of his State and section, and was in active cavalry service in various capacities – as partisan ranger, scout, staff-officer, &c., from the fighting of the first gun, through four years of almost constant hard-riding and fighting, till the last flag was furled and the cause of secession forever lost.

 

The Mc’Queen Will Case – Singular “Eccentricities” – Crazy or Demoniacal.

The Probate Court of Marshall county – which, under recent legislation, is a still more important Court than it was before – was in session at Holly Springs last week, Hon. Thomas A Falconer, presiding. Among the business before the Court was the trial of a somewhat celebrated will case, which presented several points of interest to the community, and the the public at large. The contest was over the will of the late Peter McQueen, a queer old merchant and planter of Marshall county, of considerable wealth, who was killed during the war – but not in battle, as will hereafter be related. By this will, Mr. McQueen left his whole property to a niece and her four children – thus completely ignoring and disinheriting his only child, a daughter, who is a widow – being the relict of the late Dr. Cottrell of that county, and a most excellent and highly respected lady. Long before his death, and while they were still young girls, McQueen had disowned both his daughters – one of whom died before her father – and driven them from home: – and for what, do you suppose? Because they attended a camp-meeting, made a profession of religion and joined the Methodist Church! He even went so far as to declare that he would rather see his children the inmates of a brothel than members of a church! The only charitable mode of accounting for conduct and language so hideously unnatural, is to presume that he was insane, – certainly not of that “sound, disposing mind, the law requires in a testator; – and it is upon this ground that Mrs. Cottrell and her friends are contesting the will. Quite a mass of curious evidence (eighty witnesses, in all, were examined in the trial) was introduced, bearing on this point.

 

A half-dozen witnesses testified that they heard the old man declare, in the Spring of 1861, that he, living on his farm in Marshall county, Miss., had distinctly heard the guns of Forts Sumter and Moultie, in the celebrated artillery duel of Gen. Beauregard and Maj. Anderson, a few days before! Upon its being suggested that the distance was so great such a “fear in acoustics” was impossible, Mr. McQueen assured that his sense of hearing was for more accurate than any other person’s in the world, and what might be impossible to all others was quite practicable to him; certainly he had heard the thunder of the first guns of the war sounding over mountain and valley, a distance of more than seven hundred miles as the crow flies! He also said that he had distinctly heard the firing at Pensacola a short time afterwards.

 

My informant related several other instances of Peter McQueen’s exceeding “eccentricity” – to call it by no harsher name – which are almost beyond belief. Surely, they were not all put in proof on the trail last week, or the jury would hardly have made a “miss-trail,” – and this is th3e second time, too: – as I am told they did. Eight of the jurors, it is stated, were for, and four against “breaking” the will. So the “hung,” and the case is “hung up” in court for another term or two – perhaps till the best part of the property is consumed away in lawyer’s fees and court costs. Assuredly, the institution of “trial by jury” would appear to need revision, as it exists in this country. In civil suits, at least, it seems to me that a majority, as in Scotland (and in France, too, I believe) ought to be permitted to bring in a verdict. A majority of justices of the Supreme Court of the Union decide great questions of law, – why should not a majority of intelligent jurors decide questions of fact and law, under the advice and instruction of the Court? If not a majority, why not two-thirds, or three-fourths? This thing of requiring perfect unanimity of every jury of twelve men, before a verdict can be made up, is unreasonable – has resulted in millions of useless expense, and has done more to make “the law’s delay” a hateful proverb among men, than any and all other of the old “mouldy prescription of the Past” that could be named.

 

But to return to McQueen’s ‘idiosynacracies,” to call them by another too mild name. Before the was, one of his negro men ran away, but after a considerable time voluntarily returned and requested to be taken into favor again. McQueen told him he would allow him to remain without punishment, on one condition, and that was, that if he ever ran off again, he (McQueen) was to have the privilege of hanging him, if he ever caught him thereafter! To this, strange to say, the negro man consented, entered into a contract to that effect, and, stranger still, ran away again during the ware – not long after the Federal troops occupied Memphis; was by some means, captured by McQueen, and did positively suffer the extreme penalty of hanging, upon which he himself had agreed, at the hands of his ruthless and “eccentric” master! A coffin was prepared and a grave dug beforehand, and the neighbors invited to see that the “contract” was duly and properly carried out. The neighbors expostulated with McQueen and used their best efforts to prevent the execution, but to no purpose…. And this, I am credibly informed, happened on the farm of Peter McQueen, in the neighborhood of Byhalia, in 1862. I can hardly believe it yet.

 

Another “eccentricity” of this strangely instance old man is thus told: He cam into possession of a horse a few years ago, which cost him only $15. Not long afterwards, some one stole this horse and “decamped with him to parts unknown.” By some means or other, McQueen got on the track of the thief, and immediately started in pursuit, on horseback, with a greased rope in his saddlebags, which he carried along, as he afterwards stated, for the purpose of hanging the thief with it when he should come up with him. With that greased rope in his saddlebags, he followed the flying rogue across Mississippi, across Arkansas and Louisiana, into Texas, and up and down Texas, for a distance of 1,500 miles – undergoing incredibly hardship and fatigue _ and he past sixty years of age, – all to reclaim a stolen horse worth $15, and hang the thief with his chosen rope! Hanging seemed to be his favorite mode of punishment!

 

The last of McQueen’s wonderful “eccentricities” that I shall attempt to record – one that led to a direful tragedy, involving his own destruction; causing him to be hunted and shot down as if he were a veritable wild beast – had its development in Choctaw county, (Miss.) whither he had removed with his negroes the second or third year of the war, in order to be without Federal lines, and as far away as possible from Federal troops and Federal “raids.” It appears that during one of his absences from his temporary home in Choctaw, two favorite young dogs (McQueen was a great lover of hounds and hunting), had strayed away from home, and by accident, got to the house of a poor man, named Flowers. On his return home, and missing his canine favorite, the old man took his gun and hunting horn and got upon his horse, and went blowing around through the neighborhood, in order to call up the puppies and find out where they were – knowing that if they heard the horn they would be sure to come to him. The neighbors and the negroes, it seems, had evaded telling him where they were, because they were pretty sure he would kill the supposed abductor or whoever might happen to have them in possession. After blowing his horn sound through the neighborhood for some hours without success, McQueen finally reached the house of F;lowers, some six or seven miles distant. He called Flowers to the door, and asked him if there were any stray dogs there? Flower replied he did not know – if there were, he was not aware of the fact. Where upon, McQueen blew a blast upon his horn, which of course brought all the dogs to the spot, and among the rest the missing pups. Some angry words then passed between McQueen and Flowers, when the former, suddenly raising his fun, shot the latter down in his own door, killing him instantly. The neighborhood was soon aroused by the news of the terrible deed, and a number of exasperated men came together for the purpose of executing summary justice upon the unhappy, but to my mind, evidently insane perpetrator. But McQueen hearing of their intention, mounted a fleet horse and attempted to make his escape Northwardly in this direction. The “avengers of innocent blood,” however, soon got upon his track, pursued him as far as Calhoun county, where they caught up with him and mercilessly “shot him to death” in the road. Thus ended the career of one of the most remarkable men whose history has come to my knowledge for this many a day – a man, i am informed by those who knew him, remarkable for the exhibition of extraordinary intellectual powers at times, but more frequently for the strangest and most insane “eccentricities,” both of the head and heart, that ever cursed poor humanity, with the appearance of being closely akin to the rankest and most rampant diabolism.

 

-In the “McQueen Will Case,” Messrs. Featherstone, Harris, and Ricahrd Watson are the counsel for Mrs. Mullen, the niece of the testator, who claimed under the will; and Messrs. Walter, Falconer, and John W.C. Watson are of counsel for Mrs. Cottrell, the only child of the deceased, who seeks to invalidate the will on the ground of the testator’s evident insanity. Offers to the compromise have been made by the latter (Mrs. Cottrell); but as the children of the niece (Mrs. Mullen) are also legatees under the will, and they are all still minors, these offers have been on this ground refused. It should be mentioned to the honor of both parties to the suit, that they joined in order to the Administrator of the estate in Choctaw county to set apart a comfortable support for the family of the man – Flowers_ so madly murdered by McQueen on account of the “stray dogs;” and this order, I learn, had been properly carried out. J.P.P

 

P.S. – Since the foregoing was written, I find that the “breaks” in the Memphis and Charleston Road beyond Iuka, caused by the recent freshet, will cut short my intended trip to North Alabama for the present. The first “break” is at the crossing of Bear Creek. This, however, I learn will be repaired and made ready for the trains by Wednesday evening or Thursday morning.

 

I have also learned from gentlemen who left Holly Springs this morning, that the “hung jury,’ referred to in the above remarks on the “McQueen Will Case,” did not stay “hung” as was reported, but finally came to the unanimous, sensible conclusion that Peter McQueen was too much of a lunatic to make a will, and thereupon Judge Falconer refused to admit the will to probate. It is believed that they case will be taken up to the High Court of Errors and Appeals. Already, the Court costs (according to my information) have reached near $1,500. F.

Peter McQueen 1.0

Note: to see a post for Robert Haskins Crozier CLICK HERE

While I continue to track down the parents of Peter McQueen I suppose putting some information up about him would keep me from writing one very, very long post about him. †

 

My relationship to Peter McQueen:

Me

Virginia Marie Stalls (mother)

James Paul Stalls, Jr (granddaddy)

Minnie Virginia Richards (g-grandmother)

Jerome E Richards (2nd g-grandfather)

Caroline McQueen (3rd g-grandmother)

Peter McQueen (4th g-grandfather)

 

According to census records Peter McQueen was born about 1795 in South Carolina.  I do know (due to a court case involving one of his daughters and his niece) that he had at least one older sister named Ann McQueen who married Stephen Wood.  Ann McQueen, also from South Carolina, died in Meriwether County, Georgia.

Peter McQueen is not on any census records until 1840 for some reason, so tracking his exact whereabouts is difficult.

Peter married Elizabeth Freeland in 1820 in West Feliciana, Louisiana.  They had (according to the divorce papers) three daughters:  Louisa in 1822, Melissa in 1824 and Caroline in 1826.  By 1827 the family was living in Lauderdale County, Mississippi.

In 1827, when Caroline was about a year old, Peter deserted his family.  He had previously sold many of their belongings.  When he left he took two slaves that Elizabeth’s father had given her, telling Elizabeth he would sell the slaves and return with the money.  He disappeared for 10 years.  I have been unable to find him on the 1830 census (or 1820 census, for that matter). 

Peter apparently returned sometime in 1837 and took the two oldest daughters, Louisa and Melissa, from their home against their will, though why he did not take Caroline is not known (unless, as might be suspected, Caroline is not actually his daughter…).  According to records he took the girls up to Marshall County, Mississippi and enrolled them in school.

Elizabeth filed for divorce in May of 1838.  She assumed that Peter had fled west of the Mississippi River and was possibly living in Arkansas.  A notice went out in the paper in Jasper County, Mississippi asking him to come forward and face the accusations.  Of course he didn’t and the divorce was finalized May 1839.

 

In 1840 Peter is found living in Northern Division, Marshall County, Mississippi.  Listed in the household are:

1 white male between 15 and 19 years of age

1 white male between 40 and 49 years of age

3 male slaves under 10 years of age

1 female slave under 10 years of age

1 female slave between 10 and 23 years of age

1 female slave between 24 and 35 years of age

Peter McQueen MS 1840

 It is not clear who the white male between 15 and 19 years of age is, nor at this point do I know if the female slave between 10 and 23 years of age and the female slave between 24 and 35 years of age are the two that he took from Elizabeth.

 

It was about 1840 when Peter brought Louisa and Melissa to live with him.  According to court records between 1840 and 1850 Peter became upset when his daughters attended a Methodist Church and kicked them both out of his house.  It’s not clear whether he kicked them out for attending church, for attending a Methodist Church or attending the night meetings at the Methodist Church.  However, Reverend Robert Haskins Crozier wrote a novel based on the incident titled Fiery Trials: Or, a story of an Infidel's Family, Rogers and Company, 1882.  The book paints Peter as an atheist who forbid his family to even think about religion. 

 

On April 24, 1843 Peter, who had been named the administrator of William M Bostwick’s estate, reported that the estate was insolvent.  Peter may not have been forthcoming in filing a list of the assets of the estate until October 1846.  (William Trezevant et al. vs. Peter McQueen, Administrator of William M. Bostwick, deceased)*

 

The January Term of 1849 found Peter in court again when Theodore Bostwick sued him for wages he felt Peter owed him.  The judge found for the defendant (Peter) and awarded a new trial.  Bostwick had failed to present evidence to prove his case and the judge declared that Peter had shown kindness in providing clothes, food and medical attention. (Peter McQueen vs. Theodore D. Bostwick)* 

 

In 1850 Peter is found on the census still living in Northern Division, Marshall County, Mississippi.  He is listed as Peter McQueen, 55 years of age, a farmer and born in South Carolina.  This is the first time that it is shown where he claims to have been born.  Also living in the household with him is a man named John Bogan, 23 years of age from North Carolina who was a carpenter.  It’s not clear his relationship to Peter.  The slave schedules also list Peter as having twenty-one slaves between the ages of 9 months and 33 years.**

Peter McQueen MS 1850

 

The year 1850 found Louisa living with the Grey family in Marshall County, Mississippi.  She would go on to marry Thomas Cottrell, then Jeremiah Elder.  In 1850 Melissa was living with the Benjamin Cottrell family in Marshall County, Mississippi.  Benjamin Cottrell owned the Sylvestria Girls School in Marshall County and Melissa taught there.  Melissa died in 1851 and is buried in the Cottrell Family Cemetery in Marshall County, Mississippi.  Her headstone reads “When my father and mother forsake me, then the Lord will take me up”.

 

The census enumerated in 1860 finds Peter living in Town 2 Range 5, Byhalia, Marshall County, Mississippi.  He is living by himself, age 65 years, a farmer, extremely wealthy and still from South Carolina.  He is again on the slave schedules as having 30 slaves between the ages of 8 months and 40 years.

Peter McQueen MS 1860

 

In 1860 Peter’s niece, Mary Ann Wood Mullins lost her husband Patrick Henry Mullins to a brain inflammation leaving her to raise four children on her own.  Peter’s will, dated September 3, 1863 appoints Mary Ann as executrix.  Peter’s entire estate was left to her and her children, but nothing to his last living child Louisa.  According to a Mississippi Supreme Court case, October Term 1866 between Mary Ann and Louisa (Mary A. Mullins et al. v. Louisa Cottrell) concerning the validity of the will Peter lived in Choctaw County (it is not clear whether Choctaw County, Mississippi or Choctaw County, Alabama, though Mississippi seems to be the most obvious) two years prior to his death.  The record of the case*** goes on to say that in Choctaw County he “killed a man in that county, and was killed in attempting to escape”.  It goes on to state that Peter died in the “autumn of 1865”, but it doesn’t give an exact date of death.  It also doesn’t tell us where he is buried.

 

Questions:

-Who are Peter McQueen’s parents?

-Where was Peter McQueen prior to 1820?

-Where was Peter McQueen between 1827 and 1837?

-Is Caroline actually Peter McQueen’s daughter?

-Who are these Mystery McQueens living with Robert Hoyle in 1860, Township 2 Range 4, Byhalia, Marshall County, Mississippi: Peter McQueen (age 2 years) and Infant Boy McQueen (age 4 months) who don’t appear to have any parents and there aren’t any other McQueens living in the area?

Mystery McQueens MS 1860

 

information on court cases concerning him will be separate posts…he apparently was not at all unfamiliar with what the inside of a court room looked like…

* both William Trezevant et al. vs. Peter McQueen, Administrator of William M. Bostwick, deceased  and Peter McQueen vs. Theodore D. Bostwick cases can be found in Cases argued and decided in the Supreme Court of Mississippi, Volume 20, Mississippi, EW Stephens Publishing Company, 1849

**I am going to go ahead and say that what I learned about this guy concerning slaves makes me really dislike…no, hate him…he truly disgusts me

***found in Mississippi Reports-edition, publisher and publishing year unknown-photocopied pages found in research files of Hubert H McAlexander, the McAlexander-Marshall County Collection, JD Williams Library, University of Mississippi-information can also be found in The Southwestern Reporter, Volume 149, West Publishing Company, 1912

More McQueen Goodness!

I received in the mail yesterday the court transcripts for the trial that erupted over Peter McQueen’s will, the will in which he left everything to his niece, rather than his own daughter (the only living daughter of the two he kidnapped in the first place, but also the only living daughter since as Caroline passed previous to his death).

Today, however, we will not be going over these transcripts.  Today we are going to piece together what I have found concerning the McQueen family. 

Peter McQueen was born about 1795 in South Carolina.  We know that he married Elizabeth Freeland in Louisiana in 1820.  Peter and Elizabeth had at least three daughters, as named in the divorce papers: Louisa, Melissa and Caroline.  The divorce was granted for Elizabeth from Peter in 1839 in Mississippi.  I have not been able to locate Elizabeth after this, though she may either be the Elizabeth McQueen in Lauderdale County, Mississippi who married Claburn Perry in 1840 or she may have died, since the divorce papers described her as “infirm” (whether that meant she was on her deathbed, had the sniffles or somewhere in between is not clear).  I’m betting on the marriage, but so far I can’t find any other record of Elizabeth or Claburn to match up year of birth or place of birth.

In 1837 Peter McQueen returned to his home ten years after abandoning his family and pretty much kidnapped his two oldest daughters, Louisa and Melissa (by the way, I am sure I will go over all of this again in another post, say the post concerning the trial, but there is a point to all of this now, I promise).  Why he did not take Caroline with him also is not known, though speculation is that she either was not his child or may not have been at the home at the time he returned.

Peter enrolled Louisa and Melissa in a girl’s school where they later taught or lived for respite (more on that another day).  Melissa died young, having never married.  Louisa married first Thomas Cottrell, second Jeremiah Elder, both much older than herself-26 years and 22 years respectively).  Louisa did not have any children by 1865, and I am not yet certain if she had any after.

Caroline married Edmund Richards in 1846 in Arkansas.  She is on the 1850 census with Edmund and three of their children living in Arkansas.  There is also an 18 year old woman named Mary McQueen living with them that I had assumed was her sister, but I am no longer sure (if so, then Mary would have been born while Peter was gone from his family when Caroline was 4 years old-therefore possibly a different father or she could be a cousin of Caroline).  Caroline is not on the 1860 census with her family, which leads me to believe she passed between February of 1856 after her youngest son Jerome was born and August 1860 when the census was enumerated.  Though I am pretty tempted to keep looking for her since I was unable to find any record of her death (which is not unusual).

So, back to Peter.  By his death in 1865 the only daughter left living was Louisa.  Due to a…uh, we’ll call it a “disagreement”, between the two, Peter left everything to his niece Mary Ann Mullins (and I checked to see if this Mary Ann Mullins might have been the same person as the Mary McQueen living with Caroline in 1850, but it isn’t).  Mary Ann Mullins actually was a big clue to help me along with finding some of Peter’s family, though I still haven’t located his parents yet.  BUT, here’s what I found:

Mary Ann Mullins was born Mary Ann Wood in 1832 in the state of Georgia to parents Stephen Wood (of Virginia, 1792-1862) and Ann McQueen (of South Carolina, 1793-1834).  She married Patrick Henry Mullins (1824-1860), though I am not sure in what state they were married.  Together Mary Ann and Patrick, a tobacconist, had four children: Stephen, Matilda, Mary and Pauline.  Patrick died March 8, 1860 in Alabama of a brain inflammation.  After his death Mary Ann moved in with her Uncle Peter in Holly Springs, Marshall County, Mississippi.  After his death she and her children lived in Holly Springs for quite a while.  Mary Ann passed in 1917 in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee of old age and is buried in Byhalia, Marshall County, Mississippi.  Her headstone, which can be found on Find-a-Grave, reads:  Mary A. Wood, Wife of P.H. Mullins, 1832 1917.

SO, now to research the McQueens.  Both Peter and Ann McQueen were born in South Carolina, Ann in 1793 and Peter about 1795.  The McQueens listed on the census records in 1790 in South Carolina are:

 

James McQueen-Edgefield, South Carolina, two males, one female, three slaves

 

Daniel McQueen-Prince Georges, Georgetown, South Carolina, two males, two females, two slaves

Rachel McQueen-Prince Georges, Georgetown, South Carolina, five males, two females, one slave (note: all five males are under the age of 16 years)

Ruth McQueen-Prince Georges, Georgetown, South Carolina, one male, two females, four slaves

 

Robert McQueen-St Phillips and St Michaels, Charleston, South Carolina,  one male, one female

John McQueen-St Phillips and St Michaels, Charleston, South Carolina, two males, one slave

 

The McQueens listed on the 1800 census in South Carolina are:

 

Nell, or Neil, McQueen-Liberty, Marion District, South Carolina, two males, five females

 

William McQueen-Kingston, Georgetown District, South Carolina, two males, four females

Rachel McQueen-Kingston, Georgetown District, South Carolina, five males, four females

 

No McQueens have been found at all in the state of Georgia in 1800 or 1810.

McQueens listed on the 1820 census in Georgia (are you ready for this?  it’s a loooong list!):

 

John McQueen-Washington, Georgia, one male, three females

 

Lydia McQueen-Savannah, Chatham, Georgia, one female, seven slaves

 

Now, I’m not even sure if any of my McQueens, except for Ann McQueen, ever moved to Georgia.  Ann died and was buried in Meriwether County, Georgia.  Chatham and Washington Counties are not what I would call “nearby” Meriwether County back in those days (prior to cars being able to zip up and down the freeways, I mean).  I can’t be certain if she married in South Carolina or Georgia (why, oh why, can I not find the marriage record?).  If I could find that record it might give me a clue as to who Peter and Ann’s parents are.