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Lycoming
Hangings a Spectator's Event
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Williamsport Sun-Gazette
Executions weren't always such
a subject of controversy. Individual counties handled
the grim task themselves in many cases. Lycoming County
was no exception to this but, surprisingly, the first
hanging conducted under the auspices of the county judiciary
did not occur until 1836 some 41 years after the county
was organized in 1795.
The lurid story of the circumstances surrounding the event
read like something from today's tabloid press. It interested
Marshall Anspach, who presented his research in a paper
presented to the Muncy Historical Society in 1944. His
findings tell the controversial story of John Earls, an
illiterate man who had little or no education. He eked
out a living as a fisherman and lived hand-to-mouth about
five miles below Muncy along the banks of the Susquehanna
River near the southern slope of the Muncy Hills.
His marriage to his wife, Catherine, was a troubled one,
punctuated by many acts of violence by him. Earls was
in love with another woman, named Maria Moritz. It is
reported that Earls repeatedly told his wife "that
if she could hug and kiss like Maria Moritz he would love
her a great deal better." Anspach writes in a piece
of classic understatement that, "this could scarcely
make for piece in any household."
On Oct. 15, 1835, Earls bought a quantity of white powdered
arsenic from the Bruner and Dawson Apothecary in Muncy.
He initially claimed that he bought the arsenic to kill
minks and muskrats because they would attack the fish
basket that he used during his fishing. According to his
subsequent confession, he placed the arsenic in some chocolate
as it was heating on the stove. Mrs. Earls consumed some
of the chocolate and soon became sick from the poison.
Earls compounded his fiendish act by placing some more
arsenic in the mint tea that his wife was taking to help
recover from her previous dose of poison.
The final dose of arsenic proved to be the coup de grace
and Mrs. Earls finally died in great agony from the poison.
She was buried two days later. Immediately, Earls fell
under suspicion for his wife's death. Two days after Mrs.
Earls' death a Coroner's Inquest was convened. Catherine
Earls' body was then disinterred and an autopsy was performed
that showed conclusively that she had been poisoned. Earls
was immediately arrested.
Earls was placed on trial in February 1836. Anson V. Parsons,
William Cox Ellis and Robert Campbell represented him.
Anspach writes the "trial is one of the longest on
record in this county." It ran from Feb. 3 to Feb.
15, 1836. This seems remarkably brief for a capital murder
trial by today's standards. A spirited defense was carried
on for Earls. Fifty-seven witnesses were called. Much
testimony was heard about Earls' abusive treatment of
his wife and, of course, medical evidence was shown that
that Mrs. Earls died of poisoning.
The trial was a major event in the area causing much excitement
drawing spectators from miles around. Finally, the jury
returned a guilty verdict after an evening of deliberations.
The court sentenced Earls to death the morning following
the verdict.
On March 30, 1836, Governor Ritter signed Earls' death
warrant and he was to be hung on May 24, 1836. Three days
before he was due to be executed, Earls dictated a confession
admitting his role in his wife's death. It read, in part,
"I had in view for several months before her death,
to get clear of the encumbrance of my marriage to her,
by taking her life." He continued, "It was my
affection for Maria Moritz that induced me thus wickedly
and feloniously to take the life of my wife at the time
I did."
Around 1 p.m. May 24, 1836, Earls, accompanied by the
sheriff, his deputies, the Deputy Attorney General who
prosecuted the case and escorted by a company of volunteer
militia, went to the gallows. According to the "Lycoming
Chronicle" account of May 25, 1836, "At 20 minutes
before 3 his (Earls') arms were pinioned by the sheriff
amid cries of agony, lamentations and tears." At
2:45 p.m., a hood was placed over Earls' head. The sheriff
struck an axe to a rope that held the drop at 2:56 p.m.
and the deed was done.
The account continues, "The fall immediately broke
his neck: a slight struggle and all was over; nothing
was heard but the heaving of his breath in the throes
of death. Immediately after the blow, the sheriff sank
entirely overcome by his feelings and the sternness of
the officer was lost in the kindness of the man."
Earls remained hanging from the gallows for about 20 minutes
until he was pronounced dead by a physician. He then was
cut down and placed in an open coffin in the front of
the jail where people had the opportunity to see the remains
of this nefarious wrongdoer. He then was buried in the
rear of the jail yard.
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