A Murder in Salem
In 1830, a brutal crime in Massachusetts riveted the nation—and inspired the writings of Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne
- By E.J. Wagner
- Photographs by Chris Beatrice
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 7)
Since nothing had been stolen, the assailant’s motive puzzled townspeople and authorities alike. But revenge was not out of the question. As many in Salem knew, Joseph White was hardly the “universally respected and beloved” old man one local newspaper described. A bit of a domestic tyrant, he was given to changing his will at a whim and using his large fortune as a weapon to enforce his wishes. When his pretty young grandniece Mary announced her engagement to Joe Knapp, the old man declared Joe a fortune hunter, and when the marriage went forward without his consent, White disinherited Mary and fired Knapp.
What’s more, White had been a slave trader. The ownership of slaves was abolished in Massachusetts in 1783 and the slave trade outlawed five years later. Yet White had boasted to Salem minister William Bentley in 1788 that he had “no reluctance in selling any part of the human race.” (In Bentley’s estimation, this “betray[ed] signs of the greatest moral depravity.”) In a water-stained letter written in 1789 that I found deep in the archives of the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, a sailor named William Fairfield, who served on the schooner Felicity, told his mother about a slave revolt that had killed the ship’s captain. Joseph White was one of the owners of the Felicity.
Some of White’s ships had engaged in legitimate trade, hauling everything from codfish to shoes. But many had sailed from Salem laden with tools and trinkets, to be traded in Africa for human cargo. Manacled and cramped into ghastly holds, many of the captives did not survive the voyage. Those who did were traded in the Caribbean for gold—enough to buy property, build a mansion and fill an iron chest.
“Many maritime families in Salem supported the slavery system in one way or another,” says Salem historian Jim McAllister. That was how they had built their fortunes and paid their sons’ Harvard tuitions. There was an understanding in Salem society that this shameful business was best not spoken of, particularly in Massachusetts, where antislavery sentiments ran high. “A few of our merchants, like others in various seaports, still loved money more than the far greater riches of a good conscience, more than conformity with the demands of human rights, with the law of the land and the religion of their God,” Salem minister Joseph B. Felt wrote in 1791.
A little more than a week after the murder, Stephen White received a letter from a jailer 70 miles away in New Bedford. The letter said an inmate named Hatch, a petty thief, claimed he had crucial information. While frequenting gambling houses in February, Hatch had overheard two brothers, Richard and George Crowninshield, discussing their intent to steal Joseph White’s iron chest. The Crowninshield brothers were the disreputable scions of an eminent Salem family. Richard, according to court transcripts, was known to favor Salem’s “haunts of vice.” The town’s Committee of Vigilance brought Hatch in chains to testify before a Salem grand jury. On May 5, 1830, the jury indicted Richard Crowninshield for murder. His brother George—and two other men who were in his company at the gambling house—were charged with abetting the crime. All were detained in the Salem Gaol, a grim edifice of granite blocks, iron-barred windows and brick-walled cells.
Then, on May 14, Joseph Knapp Sr., the father of the man who had married White’s disinherited grandniece, received a letter from Belfast, Maine. It demanded a “loan” of $350, and threatened disclosure and ruin if this were not promptly paid. It was signed “Charles Grant.”
The senior Knapp could make no sense of the matter and asked his son for advice. It’s “a devilish lot of trash,” Joe Knapp Jr. told his father and advised him to give it to the committee.
The Committee of Vigilance pounced on the letter. It sent $50 anonymously to Grant at his local post office, with a promise of more to come, and a man was dispatched to apprehend whoever collected the money. The recipient turned out to be John C.R. Palmer. Arrested as a possible accessory to the murder, but promised immunity for his testimony, he told a complex tale: during a stay at the Crowninshield family home, Palmer had overheard George tell Richard that John Francis (“Frank”) Knapp, a son of Joseph Knapp Sr., wanted them to kill Captain White—and that Joe Jr., Frank’s brother, would pay them $1,000 to commit the crime. The Committee of Vigilance promptly arrested the Knapp brothers and sent them to the Salem Gaol, their cells not far from those occupied by the Crowninshields.
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Comments (10)
i wanna cite dis 4 a project dude!
Posted by Billy on January 16,2013 | 11:55 AM
Was Poe really inspired by this article?
Posted by Dawson Warner on November 15,2012 | 09:30 AM
Actually, crimes in those days were usually reported in a highly inaccurate and sensational fashion. Poe did not feel he had "solved" the Mary Rogers case through newspaper reports--they truly led him astray--but because he claimed to have "inside information." (It's anyone's guess if that was the truth or not.)
Posted by Undine on October 31,2012 | 06:44 PM
wat u kill that man fer.
Posted by Bubba McBillybob Jr. III on April 9,2012 | 02:29 PM
interesting.... wow!
Posted by me on December 14,2010 | 05:54 PM
@ bcarter3 - Well, it isn't a murder mystery, it's a historical piece, and the murderer is a matter of public record. We get a capsule of what happened, and then a detailed article on the event, investigation, trial and its legacy.
I agree this was a great article, which is one I read aloud to my vision-impaired grandmother, who enjoyed it as well.
Posted by Daniel (no relation) Hawthorn on November 26,2010 | 08:42 PM
was such a misterious article, but a pretty good one.. i hope to find next time something relative with korean singers or bands, they could be even more interesting ..
Posted by Milagros on November 11,2010 | 11:07 AM
Indeed, a fascinating story. One can almost taste the times of E.A. Poe and Hawthorne. I think Arthur C. Doyle was familiar with the story too. Modern journalists can learn something from their 19th century forerunners. Crimes were related so accurate in the newspapers of those days, Poe was able to solve the crime of Mary Rogers by reading the papers (so I've been told.)
Try that today.
Roland
Netherlands
Posted by Roland on November 11,2010 | 07:47 AM
Great article but I agree with the above comment; disappointed about the caption!
Posted by Donna on November 10,2010 | 02:09 AM
This is a fascinating and beautifully written story.
But why on earth do you reveal the identity of the murderer in the caption for the illustration at the beginning of the article?
Posted by bcarter3 on October 31,2010 | 03:28 PM