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
On the evening of April 6, 1830, the light of a full moon stole through the windows of 128 Essex Street, one of the grandest houses in Salem, Massachusetts. Graced with a beautifully balanced red brick facade, a portico with white Corinthian columns and a roof balustrade carved of wood, the three-story edifice, built in 1804, was a symbol of prosperous and proper New England domesticity. It was owned by Capt. Joseph White, who had made his fortune as a shipmaster and trader.
A childless widower, White, then 82, lived with his niece, Mary Beckford (“a fine looking woman of forty or forty-five,” according to a contemporary account), who served as his housekeeper; Lydia Kimball, a domestic servant; and Benjamin White, a distant relative who worked as the house handyman. Beckford’s daughter, also named Mary, had once been part of the household, but three years earlier she had married young Joseph Jenkins Knapp Jr., known as Joe, and now lived with him on a farm seven miles away in Wenham. Knapp was previously the master of a sailing vessel White owned.
That night, Captain White retired a little later than was his habit, at about 9:40.
At 6 o’clock the following morning, Benjamin White arose to begin his chores. He noticed that a back window on the ground floor was open and a plank was leaning against it. Knowing that Captain White kept gold doubloons in an iron chest in his room, and that there were many other valuables in the house, he feared that burglars had gained access to it. Benjamin at once alerted Lydia Kimball and then climbed the elegant winding stairs to the second floor, where the door to the old man’s bedchamber stood open.
Captain White lay on his right side, diagonally across the bed. His left temple bore the mark of a crushing blow, although the skin was not broken. Blood had oozed onto the bedclothes from a number of wounds near his heart. The body was already growing cold. The iron chest and its contents were intact. No other valuables had been disturbed.
I first read of the Salem murder many years ago in a Greenwich Village secondhand bookshop. I’d ducked inside to escape a sudden downpour, and as I scanned the dusty shelves, I discovered a battered, coverless anthology of famous crimes, compiled in 1910 by San Francisco police captain Thomas Duke.
The chapter on Captain White’s savage killing, evocative of the golden age mystery tales of the late 19th century, riveted me at once. The famed lawyer and congressman Daniel Webster was the prosecutor at the ensuing trial. His summation for the jury—its inexorable cadence, the slow gathering of dreadful atmospheric details—tugged at my memory, reminding me of Edgar Allan Poe’s tales of terror. In fact, after talking with Poe scholars, I learned that many of them agreed the famous speech had likely been the inspiration for Poe’s story “The Tell-Tale Heart,” wherein the narrator boasts of his murder of an elderly man. Moreover, I discovered, the murder case had even found its way into some of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s works, with its themes of tainted family fortunes, torrential guilt and ensuing retribution.
Those facts alone proved an irresistible magnet to a crime historian like me. But the setting—gloomy, staid Salem, where in the 1690s nineteen men and women were convicted of witchcraft and hanged—endowed the murder case with another layer of gothic intrigue. It almost certainly fed the widespread (and admittedly lurid) fascination with the sea captain’s death among the American public at the time. The town, according to an 1830 editorial in the Rhode Island American, was “forever...stained with blood, blood, blood.”
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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