Obit: Ableitner, Frederick
Contact: Janet
Surnames: Ableitner, Allen, Austin, Barber, Briggs, Cornell, Clough, Cornell, Davis, Edwards, Franklin, Hacket, Hotchkiss, Hyde, Ireland, Jones, McClosky, Marshall, Moody, Morrison, Page, Richardson, Robinson,, Staley, Sullivan, Whitman
----Source: Rochester, Minnesota Historical Society
THE MURDER OF FREDERICK ABLEITNER.
Among all civilized peoples the willful, malicious, wrongful taking of human
life is regarded as the highest crime known to the law. The act never fails to
excite the horror and execration of the community in which it is committed, and
invokes the just and speedy trial, condemnation and punishment of the murderer.
But in murder, as well as in other offenses against society and the law, there
are degrees of guilt and criminality. In some cases there are extenuating
circumstances, as great provocation, sudden impulse of anger, or other
conditions which tend to modify, to a greater or lesser extent, the real guilt
of the criminal, and are and justly, too plead and allowed in mitigation of
punishment. The case, however, which we are about to relate May well be classed
among the most brutal, cold-blooded and fiendish in the annals of crime. Three
strong, healthy and vigorous young men get together and coolly, deliberately,
and with a sang-froid (evenness of mind under stress) strikingly shocking, plan,
plot and proceed to murder a harmless and unsuspecting old man in his humble
prairie home. The old man had never done his murderers any wrong; they had no
motive to call him from his bed in the darkness of the night to assault and
murder him, save that of robbing him of property justly and solely his own.
At the time our narrative commences, there were residing at or about the little
city of St. Charles, in Winona county, three men, named John Whitman, Charles
Edwards and George W. Staley. Whitman was a married man, about thirty-five years
of age, and with his family, resided at St. Charles. Edwards and Staley were
young men and unmarried. They were transient characters and had come into that
neighborhood some time in the latter part of the summer of 1867, and engaged to
work as harvest hands.
About two miles west of St. Charles, in the town of Dover, Olmsted county, was
the farm residence of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ableitner, an old German couple.
The country was then new and the old couple's home, though comfortable, was
humble and unpretending, but, unfortunately for them, it was thought that they
had a considerable sum of money in the house, recently sent to them from their
native country. Jobn Whitman, it seems, had been at Mr. Ableitner's house, and
while there he claims to have seen the old gentleman exhibit quite a sum of
money as he was paying off some harvest hands. He informed Edwards that the old
man had $2,000 in gold put away in a chest. The two men were not very long in
making up their minds to rob the old German, and, taking Staley into the
conspiracy, the three agreed upon the night of October 29, 1867, to put their
wicked plan into execution. On the night of the murder the three men drank
heavily at a saloon in St. Charles, and then, with brain crazed with whisky, and
with robbery and murder in their hearts, they started for the scene of their
horrible crime. It would appear that they had not fully determined upon killing
their unsuspecting victim when they left St. Charles, but in talking the matter
over, Edwards suggested that "dead men tell no tales," an adage which was
readily agreed to by the other two men. Accordingly on the way they cut each man
a club, Staley having with him also a loaded revolver. It was agreed that
Edwards should call the old man to the door and knock him down, while Staley
should watch him and Whitman assist Edwards in robbing the house. Arriving at
the house Edwards knocked at the door, and Ableitner inquired: "Who was there
and what was wanted." Edwards replied that a couple of men had lost their way
and wanted to inquire the road to Chatfield. Upon this the old man came to the
door, when Edwards knocked him down with his club. The victim got on to his
hands and knees trying to rise, when Staley shot him with his pistol. Two or
three more shots were fired at the old man. Edwards afterward lighted a paper,
by which they looked in and saw the wounded man walking about the house, holding
his hand to his side and groaning piteously. The above is, in substance, the
narration of the circumstances connected with the cold-blooded and brutal
transaction as minutely detailed by Staley in his confession, and is probably
true in the main.
Mr. Ableitner survived his terrible injuries a few hours, but before he died he
stated that there was only about fifteen dollars in money in the house at the
time he was attacked.
Of course the entire community was deeply stirred over the brutal deed, and
measures were speedily taken to ferret out the guilty ones and bring them to
justice. Edwards, soon after the murder, disappeared and was never seen
afterward by any one having knowledge of the murder. Whitman and Staley,
however, remained in the neighborhood, and suspicion resting upon Staley as
having been concerned in the murder, he was arrested upon a warrant issued by
Justice Stevenson, of Dover. In the meantime Whitman pretended to be very active
and officious in searching out the murderers, and it is a singular fact that
while Staley was in custody during his examination, he was placed in charge of
Whitman, the people little thinking that the latter was one of the murderous
confederates. Justice Stevenson, deeming the evidence insufficient to warrant
him in holding Staley for trial, discharged him.
Whitman and Staley remained in and about St. Charles for a number of days, when
the citizens held an indignation meeting and resolved to put the case into the
hands of Chicago detectives. Soon after this, Whitman, with his family, and also
Staley, left the country. Mr. D. J. Page, a Chicago detective, appeared at St.
Charles about this time and set himself to work to hunt up and arrest the
murderers of Ableitner. Gathering what information he could, Page started east,
as he believed, on the trail of the guilty and absconding Whitman. He traced the
fugitive through Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania to Runnelsville, New
York, where he found Whitman's family, but no Whitman. He had been there but his
then whereabouts was not known. Page was at a loss to know just which way to
take, but finally concluded to start in a westerly direction. Upon arriving at
Rochester, New York, he was fortunate enough to find a clue that finally led to
the capture of his man. He there teamed that Whitman was somewhere in the
Michigan pineries, working as a teamster. With this slight clue, the wily and
persistent Page pushed on to Michigan, and at a little town called Cedar
Springs, in the pine forests of that state, he found and arrested Whitman,
December 18, 1867. The detective brought his prisoner to Rochester and lodged
him in jail. We will here finish our narrative concerning John Whitman and then
take up again the case of Staley.
At the Jun term of the district court, 186S, Charles Edwards, John Whitman and
George W. Staley were indicted by the grand jury for the willful murder of
Frederick Ableitner. On October 6, following, the court being then in session,
John Whitman plead guilty of manslaughter in the third degree, and on the 16th
he was sentenced by Judge Barber to confinement in the state prison for the term
of eight years. In the meantime Whitman had manifested a good degree of remorse
and penitence over his awful crime. He had confessed soon after his arrest that
he was one of the men who was present at the murder, but charged the killing
upon Edwards and Staley. Prison life, with a guilty conscience, however, did not
seem to agree with him. His health began utterly
to fail him, and on March 24, 1871, Gov. Austin granted him a full pardon.
About two weeks after landing Whitman at Rochester detective Page, with another
Chicago detective, named James Webb, started to look up Staley. Mr. Page had
obtained a slight clue to Staley's whereabouts by a letter which he saw at St.
Charles, written by a Mr. Poole, of Portage City, Wisconsin. With what
information they could gather, meager though it was, the officers pursued their
way to Sparta, Wisconsin, from whence they proceeded to Black River Falls,
thirty or forty miles further on. From that place the officers, with two or
three other men in company, proceeded to Neillsville, some twenty to thirty-five
miles distant, from whence they went to a lumbering camp, called "Allen's Camp."
an obscure place in the Wisconsin pineries, in the northeast corner of Clark
county. The party arranged to arrive at the camp in the night, as they thought
that the arrest of Staley could be effected more easily and safely when all the
lumbermen would be in bed. Accordingly, they reached the camp at two or three
o'clock on the morning of December 26. The sleeping bunks or berths in the camp
were arranged similiar to those on a steamboat, and Page, with Staley's picture
about him, passed through between the berths, and told the men to look up and
show their faces. Most of them uncovered their heads and the question was asked,
"What is wanted ?" One man, however, held the blankets down over his head, but
the officer pulled the covering off and immediately recognized Staley. Mr. Page
said to him: "George, get up, I want you." The guilty murderer and trembling
fugitive immediately got up, dressed himself, and under the escort of the
officers arrived at Rochester about December 30, when he joined his fellow
murderer, Whitman, in the common jail of Olmsted county.
June 15, 1868, Staley was arraigned in the district court Hon. L. Barber
presiding on a charge of murder in the first degree. County-attorney Start and
F. R. E. Cornell, attorney-general, conducted the prosecution. Hon. R. A. Jones,
of Rochester, and Hon. Benjamin Franklin, of Winona, appeared for the defense.
Two full days were spent in getting a jury to try the case. Over one hundred men
had been summoned before the requisite number (twelve) were selected. The
jurors' names were as follows : W. P. Clough, John Morrison, A. D. Robinson,
Aaron Richardson, R. R. Hotchkiss, J. Briggs, Barney Hacket, A. T. Hyde, D. A.
Sullivan, James Ireland, Robert McClosky and James Moody. Aaron Richardson was
chosen foreman.
About a dozen witnesses were sworn on the part of the state, and about half that
number for the defense. The trial, which lasted nine days, was very interesting
and impressive, and the proceedings were witnessed with deep and unabated
interest by a large number of spectators each day. The state, as well as the
defendant, was represented by skilled, able and energetic attorneys; the
struggle of legal acumen and adroitness in the examination of witnesses was
frequent, sharp and incisive, while the arguments before the jury were marked
for their ability, candor and soundness.
The case was given to the jury on the 26th, between five and six o'clock in the
evening. The jury retired to their room to consult together touching their
verdict, and after being out about six hours they returned to the courtroom,
and, through their foreman, announced to the court that they had agreed upon a
verdict, which was, "Guilty, as charged in the indictment."
With all the circumstances and associations the scene was deeply sad and
impressive, and was graphically described in the "Rochester Post," in its
account of the trial, as follows:
"During the trial the appearance of Staley underwent no great change. He is
twenty-two years old, of medium height, well built, and in expression candid,
sincere, and rather prepossessing. From long confinement in the cell his hands
and face have faded to a delicate white. His dress is scrupulously neat, his
hair neatly combed, and hangs in graceful curls, giving him more the appearance
of a dry goods clerk than of a prisoner on trial for his life. As the dread
ordeal drew to a close, as the terrible recollection of that dreadful night of
last October was renewed, as the fearful and ominous words, at the lumber camp,
at the dead hour of night, "Get up, George, I want you," were reiterated, and as
the web of condemning evidence continued to be woven around him, his earnestness
of expression indicated a deepening interest in the results of the proceedings.
But at no time did his self-control or steadiness of nerve forsake him.
Confronted, face to face, at the lonely hour of midnight, with the twelve men,
who, under God, held his fate in their hands; all nature hushed in repose, and
the pale lamp casting a weird and ghostly glare over all objects in the now
almost deserted courtroom, young Staley listened to the awful word "guilty"
coolly, composedly, and without any apparent excitement or emotion. All present,
including the court, attorneys and officers, were deeply moved with the sadly
interesting and solemn scenes of that midnight hour."
The condemned man was remanded to the jail, and the next day his counsel moved
the court for a new trial and suspension of sentence. The motion was heard by
the court on the first Monday of September, 1868, and denied. County-attorney
Start then moved for judgment of sentence. The prisoner arose to his feet, and
the court asked him if he had anything to say why the sentence of the law should
not be pronounced against him. Staley replied that he had ''nothing to say." The
court then passed sentence as follows: " It is adjudged by the court, now here,
that you, George W. Staley, as a punishment for the offense of which you have
been convicted, be conveyed hence to the common jail, in the county of Olmsted
and State of Minnesota; that you be kept in said jail in solitary confinement
until the fifth day of March, 1869, and that on said fifth day of March you be
hung by the neck until you are dead."
On the 12th day of September an appeal was taken to the supreme court. The
appeal was argued before that court at its session in January following. The
judgment of the court below was affirmed. A few days before the time fixed for
Staley's execution, a petition to Go v. Marshal, asking for a commutation of the
prisoner's sentence to confinement in the state prison for life, was drawn up
and circulated for signatures by E. A. Jones, Esq. The petition was very
generally signed by the jurors and leading citizens of Rochester and other near
localities, and four days before the fatal "fifth day of March " the petition
was presented to the governor by Mr. Jones. The governor granted the prayer of
the petitioners, and Staley, instead of going to the gallows, was conveyed to
the state prison.
Staley's uniform good behavior and cheerful compliance with prison rules and
regulations, together with his youthfulness and agreeable manners, won for him
sympathy, kindly feeling and respect, and after serving a prison life of six and
one-half years, he was granted a full pardon by Gov. Davis, and has since, it is
believed, led an innocent and honorable life.
In January, 1868, the legislature passed a bill appropriating $500 to be
expended in the capture of Edwards. Detective Page stated that he had heard from
Edwards; that he was in Texas, and he believed he could find him. The money, or
a portion of it, was given to Page and he made the trip to Texas in pursuit of
the fugitive, but without avail. Edwards was said to have been a Texas ranger;
that he fought in the rebel army during the rebellion, and that the old German,
Ableitner, was not the first man which he had murdered. That he was, and still
is, if not dead or reformed, a desperate character, a full-Hedged villain and
cut-throat, there seems to have been abundant evidence.
**********************
George Staley did not hang. Responding to a popular petition, Governor William
R. Marshall reduced his sentence to life in prison, and six years later Governor
Cushman K. Davis granted him a full pardon. John Whitman, one of Staley’s
cohorts, was apprehended, charged with murder, and pled guilty to third degree
manslaughter, another instance of plea bargaining. He was sentenced to eight
years in prison, but was pardoned by Governor Horace Austin after serving only
three. A third robber, Charles Edwards, disappeared.
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