Sullivan County History Book
Meeks Murder
Meeks Murder as reported May 18, 1894: Atrocious Murder!
Gus Meeks and his wife and three children were taken out of
Milan at 12o'clock
Thursday night and murdered in cold blood by W.P. and George
Taylor of Browning. The murdered were: Gus Meeks, aged 33 years,
Delora Meeks, his wife aged 30, Hattie Meeks, the four year old
girl and Mary Meeks the 18 months old baby girl.
Last Thursday night occurred one of the most horrible and
brutal murders ever committed in the annals of the criminal
history of Linn or Sullivan County. Gus Meeks, his wife and
children were killed and Nellie Meeks was knocked in the head
with a rock and buried for dead with the rest of the others. The
bodies were buried on the farm where George Taylor lived, in a
field that had been freshly planted with corn. In the center of
the field was an old straw stack that was worn and eated down by
stock till the straw was not over three feet deep at the deepest.
It was in under the edge of this straw, which had been turned and
rolled back, where the bodies were all buried and then covered
back with a little dirt, and the straw placed back on them. To
the southwest about 250 yards in the Cotter place where a family
by the name of Carter live. To the south east of the old stack
about 400 yards is the house of George Taylor. Some little time
after daylight but before five o'clock, the little girl came to
and managed to crawl out from under the straw and the first house
she saw was that of Geo. Taylor. She started there but looking
around saw the Carter house much closer, went there and tumbled
into the house in a half dazed condition, and being all bloody
and dirty, the Carter women were badly scared, there being no men
at home save a 10 year old boy. The little girl stated her name
Nellie Meeks and that her Papa & Mama were dead and buried in
the straw in the field, that sister was dead, but baby was not
dead yet. The ladies were much startled but could not believe the
strange story told by the little girl hence they sent the 10 yr.
old boy down to the straw stack to see if he could see the
bodies. He came back and said he could find nothing, then the
little girl said she could find them and went down with him and
uncovered ans showed the faces of her parents to the Carter boy.
When the boy and little girl got back the ladies sent the boy out
to tell the neighbors. The unsuspecting boy passed through the
field where George Taylor was harrowing around the old stack
trying to hide the wagon tracks, and told him ther were some dead
people in the straw stack and not to harrow on them. George
Taylor came out to harrow just as the little girl and boy got
back and when the Carter told him about the little girl crawling
out and showing him the dead people, Taylor says to the boy, you
come and go with me and we will see. He went immediately home
with the harrow, and told the little boy to go in the house and
sit down and as soon as he got the team put up they would go see.
The little boy went into the house and waited for George Taylor,
but George TAylor did not go in. He took a horse out of the barn
and made a run for Browning. The circumstances leading up to the
crime is a matter of court record in Linn and Sullivan counties.
There are a number of criminal cases in Linn and Sullivan
counties against Wm. P. and George Taylor brothers. The charges
against them are forgery, arson, larceny, viz the bank draft
case, the case in Linn county, for incendairyism, and the
McCullough cattle case from this county. William P. Taylor, Gus
Meeks and others were indicted. Meeks pleaded guilty at the last
term of the Sullivan County Court and sent to the penitentary.
About one month ago the Governor pardoned Meeks out of the state
prison in order to use him as a witness and because of his being
the principal witness against the Taylors, they were in
consequense, very anxious to get him out of the way before court
next week, also Abner Page who now lives near Sticklerville, as
he was a victim already marked had little Nellie Meeks been dead
and the story untold. Some two weeks ago Wm. Taylor commenced
arranging with Gus Meeks to get him to move out of the country so
he would not be present to testify when the trail came up. It was
arranged that the Meeks, for a team and wagon, and $1000 in
money, would move out of the community. The plan was for the
Taylors to move Gus Meeks away, to be driven to Geo. Taylors the
first night, to remain there during the day, and the next night
to make the drive out of the community. Mrs. Meeks, mother of
Gus, with whom Gus lived in Milan, knew the plan. From Mrs. Meeks
it was learned that Fus received a letter on Thursday, and
Attorney Pierce in searching the Meeks house found the letter
Saturday: Browning, Mo. May 10, 1894. Be ready at 10 o'clock,
everything is right,xxx The letter was written on a letter head
of the Peoples exchange Bank of Browning of which Wm. P. Taylor
is Cashier. The letter was mailed on the Burlington train,
addressed to Gus Meeks, Milan, Missouri. The receiving stamp of
the MIlan post office shows the letter to have been received at 2
p.m. May 10, 1894. Persons familiar with the hand writing of Wm.
P. Taylor pronounce the letter and address in his hand writing.
Thursday night Gus Meeks and family did not go to bed but lay
down with their clothes on. Thursday night between 9 and 10
o'clock George Taylor drove into Browning in a wagon with a
spring seat. Wm. P. Taylor met him, and together they drove up to
the latter's house, stopped, and Wm. P. got out, went in, come
out with a quilt which he folded and spread out on the seat, he
got in and they started northeast in the direction of the MIlan
road. At midnight Mrs. Meeks says two men came to the house, but
only one came in, Gus said they were Geo. and Bill Taylor. Mrs.
Meeks says she recognized the man who came in as Wm. P. Taylor.
The clothing of the family, and some bed clothing, including a
feather tick were ready. The Standard Reporter talked with Nellie
Meeks, the only living witness, blue eyed, sweet faced, who is
not yet seven yrs. old and very bright and intelligent. She says
two men came to move us away, we got in a big wagon, the men rode
in the spring seat, and the family in the rear end of the wagon.
When we were going up the hill the man without whiskers said his
feet were cold and got out and walked along the side of the wagon
and shot Papa, and Papa Jumped out and started to run, then Mamma
screamed and started to jump when they shot Mamma and sister,
then they hit me in the head and I went to sleep." The
killing was done going up the Jenkins hill a short distance east
of Browning. The prints could be seen on the side of the road
where bodies had fallen, and large pools of blood were on the
grass and leaves at the side of the road. The brains were beat
out of the four year old girl and little Nellie was left for
dead. Here the pistol was found with 3 chambers empty, and the
rock with which the smaller children had been killed. The bodies
were then loaded in the wagon and drove about two miles coming
into the field past Geo. Taylor's house, through the meadow and
drove due west about 200 yards on the freshly planted corn ground
to the old straw pile where a grave about 2 feet wide, but 3 1/2
feet long and 16 inches deep had already been prepared for one
body. In this hole Meeks' body was placed with head and arms on
the bank. Mrs. Meeks was placed the reverse way beside her
husband. The baby was under her and at the side, while the four
year old dead girl was beside him and under. Just what position
little Nellie occupied no one knows. After Nellie went to sleep,
as she says, she knew no more until thrown out of the wagon at
the stack which seemed to arouse her. She says she knows what was
said and done but could not move, speak or cry out. She says,
"When the man put me in the straw the one with the whiskers
kicked me on the back and said, 'they are all dead now, the damn
villian sons of bitches." The doctor who examined Nellie
bears out her statement by the bruise on her back. She continued,
"They covered me up and I could not breathe good. I heard
them say it would not burn as it would not catch. "She
thought they were talking of burning the straw, but a woolen
blanket was buried out at one side about ten feet, which had been
on fire and was still burning when found. Early Friday morning
George Taylor drove into the cornfield with a harrow and followed
the wagon track harrowing it all out and drove around the stack a
few times and that is where the little Carter boy found him. Upon
George hearing the report he made a straight line to the barn,
took a horse out and started for Browning. Tom Daily had been out
to his farm and was going back into town and says George Taylor
passed him on a forced ride. George rode into town, got Wm.,
informed him of the discovery, they both passed out and met Daily
again. They were riding hard & went east, this was as early
as 8 o'clock Friday morning. The word was not received in
Browning until an hour after the Taylors left. It was then
telegraphed to Milan. Nellie says they were met by two men in a
buggy on the hill just before the murder. When the Meeks family
left Milan they had two large bundles of bed clothing and wearing
aparel, a feather tick and two pillows. Meeks wore and open face
stem winding silver watch. None of this has been found but one
partially burned quilt at the stack. The bodies remained where
they were buried all day until about 5 o'clock. It was about dark
when the Coroner of Linn Co., who lives at Bucklin, got there.
After the inquest was held the bodies were put in rude coffins
and brought to Milan. Be it said to the eternal disgrace of Linn
County, that woman's and childrens bodies were placed in those
unlined boxes in all that dirt, blood and old clothes they had
lain in all day, and unwashed, and with only "furniture
packing", and the old clothes stuffed around them. They were
brought to Milan about 11 o'clock saturday night and were placed
in the court house yard. Undertaker Schoene opened the coffins
and to the consternation of those present, the corpse had not
been washed, the coffins were crude, not finished on the inside
and with no lining. Be it said to the credit of Schoene & our
citizens generally that the bodies were taken out, and the blood
washed off, and nicely washed and cleaned and the bodies were
nicely dressed in shrouds, Schoene took the coffins and lined
them, fixed them in decent shape and put mountings on them. They
were set in the dorridors of the court house, where during the
after part of the night and Sunday morning the remains were
viewed by hundreds of people from town and the surrounding
country. The mother was in a delicate condition, and in the
natural couse of events, would have been confined in a couple of
months. When she jumped from the wagon she aborted a fetus which
was thrown in the grave with the family. At nine o'clock Sunday
morning the remains were placed in wagons and the funeral
pocession moved toward the Bute Cemetery, 5 miles south east of
Owasco. The crowd at the funeral was estimated in the thousands.
The funeral occured at 3 o'clock, services conducted by Rev.
Pollard of Milan. The grave was dug ten feet wide and all the
bodies put in one grave. Pursuring parties from all surrounding
counties were organized and by Saturday night 500 men were in
pursuit of the Taylors. Blood hounds from various places are
being used and it is thought by Monday 1000 well armed men were
on the hunt. At the corner's inquest Nellie Meeks told the same
story she had told the Standard Reporter. After hearing her story
and other evidence the Coroner's jury gave a verdict that the
Meeks had met death by gunshot wonds and blows from blunt-end
instruments. and at the hands of William P. Taylor and George E.
Taylor. The jurymen were: J.W. Gooch, Joseph Lay, Geo. Dodge,
A.J.Schrock, D.D. Cotter and W.H. Gooch. It is thought the
Taylors are skulking in the Chariton breaks and on foot. The
O.K.R.R. was patrolled from the Castle to Kirksville, the Wabash
from Kirksville South and the Sante fe with men every few feet.
June 26, 1894: Batesville, Ark. William P. and George Edward
Taylor are snugly domiclied at the Gleason Hotel, Jerrry South,
the captor wired Sheriff Barton of Linn County that he would
leave with the prisoners for St. Louis Wednesday evening. In the
meantime the TAylors are enjoying the freedom of the hotel. Mr.
South is a delegate to the Democratic State Convention which
meets tomarrow. That is the reason he is detained here. Both Men
wore beards of several weeks growth which had not been trimmed.
Both are fine looking men and might be called handsome, the
younger having a complexion as rosy as a girl's. William Price
Taylor, late prominent banker, lawyer, newspaper owner, and
member of the Legislature was the spokesman. Both are well to do
having considerable property interests in the county. No one
would suspect them of being murderers. Wm. said they went to
Springfield a few days, then south to Chadwick, Mo. They had not
run away or hid from anyone, as they intended to return home
sometime. They then came into Buffalo City, Ark. and met Mr.
Stone. He asked if they were not the Taylors and they admitted
it. He said they were confident of coming clear if given a fair
trail. Both had on new suits. One of the men was purchasing a
pair of shoes when Mr. South accosted them. They have made no
effort to escape and Mr. South is almost convinced the men are
innocent. When the Taylors were on their way to Linn Co. for
trail, they were removed from the train at Macon, later that
night sent to the jail at Moberly and transferred to a jail in
St. Joe, Mo. Sheriff Barton had been notified at Shelbina there
would be a mob to meet them at brookfield, hence the precautions.
At the approach of the train the shout went up. "Here they
come". About 25 men rode down the street with the lower part
of their faces covered with handkerchiefs all were heavly armed
& most carried Winchesters. They rode to the depot and began
to dismount. One man said there were about 250 "of us"
here. "As soon as the horsemen arrived the balance of our
crowd who were already in Brookfield would have covered their
faces with handkerchiefs and we would have taken the Taylors at
all hazards." They were a determined looking set of men. The
Linn County Court was asked to set bond but refused. The taylors
were willing to give bond of $50,000 each but was refused. The
Taylors had been in trouble before the murders. June 12, 1891: An
arrest: Last Saturday night the Sheriff and Prosecuting attorney
of Adair Co. came to Milan and Sunday moring took a team to the
George Taylor farm east of Browning where the arrested George
Taylor. About a year ago J.T. Gash bought a $2.00 draft at the
Browning Savings Bank. The draft was paid by Baird of Kirksville
after having been raised to $2,000. Wm. Prather, cashier of the
Browning Savings Bank and W.P. Taylor assistant cashier, had
received a letter containing a $2.00 bill, and asking for a $2.00
draft to be sent to J.T. Gash at Haseville. In the letter Gash
denounced W.P. Taylor and asked Prather to write the draft
himself. Taylor advised Prather not to send the draft, but did.
It was thought George Taylor was the man who had cashed the
check. He was taken to Kirksville, accompanied by Mac Wilson and
W.P. Taylor. A Mr. Link, a teller in the Kirksville Bank thought
Taylor was the man who cashed the check, Baird, the cashier,
could not be positive. Taylor made bond for $2,000 and returned
home. The man who was supposed to be Gash was in Milan and
stopped at the Crumpacker Hotel. While there J.P. Butler talked
with him and does not recognize him as Taylor. George is a good
family and is a brother of W.P. taylor, ex-representative of
Sullivan Co. It is thought George will be cleared. Oct. 16, 1891:
The George Taylor case has been taken from the Adair County Court
to the Linneus Circuit Court. The Taylor brothers were indicted
by the Grand Jury in Adair, they gave bond and took a change of
venue. Sep. 29, 1893 Cattle Stolen: A Good Haul But Not A
Successful One. Thirty-one Head Three Year Olds: Belonging to W.
McCullought-All Recovered. On his farm near Cora, W. McCullough
had over a hundred of three year old steers on pasture. He had
sold to Tom Brandon a number for future delivery, and they were
to be delivered on Wednesday 20, McCullough and others went down
on Wednesday and discovered 31 head short. It was soon noised
about that the cattle were gone, and Thursday Mr. McCullough and
other went to trace them up as parties were seen driving cattle
on the Friday night before about midnight. The cattle had been
turned into a pasture east of Browning owned by W.P. Taylor,
& on whose place a Mr. Bingham lived. The cattle remained
there forseveral days when they were turned out and were found
near Enterprise in the lanes. It developed that a gentleman had
ordered two cars for use Saturday following the Friday the cattle
were stolen providing the railway company would hold the train
until a certain hour. The shipper missed fire for some cause, and
arrangements were made for Tuesday night but it got too warm and
the cattle were turned out. It so happened that the gentleman,
Abner Page, who ordered the cars in another or assumed name was
recognized by the parties about the depot, a warrant was sworn
out for his arrest, and when the gentleman was taken into custody
by Sheriff Niblo and W. McCullough and in learning that he was
caught, squealed and gave the whole thing up at least enought to
satisfy the authorites, who immediately issued warrants and
arrested Abner Page, Gus Meeks, Arthur Binghan and W. P. Taylor.
The latter two gave bond and the former are boarding with Sheriff
Niblo. The preliminary trail is set for next Tuesday. The
developments are highly senational and unravels much that has
hereto fore been a mystery. Oct. 6, 1893: The trail of the
parties involved in cattle stealing was to have taken place
Tuesday but the defendents took a change of venue to Judge
Smith's court in Green City. The trail is set for the 13th. There
were about 100 witnesses who gave bond to be present on that day.
Gus Meeks, who was charged with being implicated in the cattle
stealing was given until the 10th to put in his appearance but
bailed to respond. His bond was forfeited. Nov. 10, 1893: Gus
Meeks is again boarding with Sheriff Niblo. He has concluded that
honesty is the best policy, and the sooner he faced the music the
sooner he will be through the courts. In the November, 1893, term
of court Delora Meeks brought suit against Wm. P. Taylor for
damages. The state had two suits against Gus meeks forfeited
recognizance; the State vs Gus Meeks, grand Larceny. Feb. 1-'95:
Circuit Court convened in Carrollton on Tue. Jan. 29, 1985 for
the purpose of trying the Tauylor case which was continued on the
part of the state until the second Monday in March Next. A
misunderstanding between the attorneys for the state and
attorneys for the defense existed. The State's attorneys were not
present when the court set the date of trail and took no offical
notice of it. The defense had subponoed all its witnesses. Jan.
29-1895. Carrolltion: Spectators at the trail of the Taylor Bros.
were from Linn, Sullivan and adjoining counties. Lawyers for the
defense were: Col. John B. Hale, Carrolltion: Senator E.R.
Stephens, Linneus; A.W. Myers, Brookfield; Virgil Conkling,
Carrolltion; D. M. Wilson, Milan. State's Representative were:
Major A.W. Mullins, Linn; Thos. M. Bresuehen, prosecuting
attorney of Linn; L. A. Holliday, Carrolltion, E.B. Fields,
Browning; Ben F. Pierce, Milan. When told the case had been
postponed the Taylors registered a protest. They were ready to go
to trail and prove their innocence. Carroltion, Mo. Mar. 18,
1895: Taylors to be Tried: The Case of the state vs. William P.
and George Taylor indicted for the murder of the Meeks family in
May, 1894, was called before Judge Rucker today, in the Carrol
Circuit Court. For the prosecution were: T.M. Bresnehan, Pros.
attorney of Linn Co.; Major A.W. Mullins of Linneus; B.F. Pierce,
Pros. Atty., Sullivan Co.; E.B. Fields, Browning; L.W. Hollimay,
Carrolltion; Sidney Miller, Pros. Atty., Carroll Co. For defense,
John B. Hal, Carrolltion; D.M. Wilson, Milan; Ex Senator, E.R.
Stephens, Linneus; A.W. Myers, Brookfield; Virgil Conkling,
Carrollton. A venue of 150 men is to be secured for jury duty.
The Taylors narrowly escaped being lynched. William P. Taylor is
a bright young man and a lawyer. He married the dayghter of
Banker Leonard of Browning, and subsequently became cashier of
the bank. He and his brother were indicted for a $2,000 check on
the Kirksville bank. They were tried and convicted but were
allowed a new trail that was never held. Gus Meeks was arrested
and convicted of stealing cattle and sent to the penitentiary.
There he made a confession which implicated the Taylors in
connection with a orgized gang. Agreeing to turn Stat's evidence
he was pardoned by the Governor, and the case was in preparation
for trail when Meeks was murdered. Early in the morning of May
11, 1895 a little girl made her way to a farm house near
Browning, and reported that her father and mother with two of
their children had been murdered the night before and buried in a
hay stack. She said the Taylors had come to their house with a
wagon and team to move the family. On the road they had shot her
father and mother to death, and beat out the brains of her little
sister and baby brother with stones. They had left her for dead
but she had revived and gotten away. The Taylor brothers
disappeared soon after the tragedy became known and for weeks
they were hunted by citizens. A month later they were captured in
Arkansas, when brought to Macon, a lynch mob gathered but the
posse eluded them and the brothers were placed in the St. Joseph
jail. The men came into court smiling andas unconcerned as a
spectator. It was agreed to lay the case over to begin Wed.
morning. Mar. 29, 1895: At 9:30 George and William Taylor were
brought into court; they were well dressed and smiling. They
carefully scrutinized each potential juryman as he was
questioned. Out of a list of 60, 20 were found acceptable, tho
the defense objected to each one. The afternoon was spent
selecting jury men. So far a panel of 33 has chosen. three car
loads of spectators to the trail, from Linn, Sullivan, Grundy,
and Livingston counties came in on the Burlingtion R.R. The jam
around the court house is equal to that of show day. April 5,
1895: When the Taylors were brought from the jail to the court
house, the crowd rushed pell mell over one another to get a look
at them. The Taylors were neatly dressed in black, their black
hair and beards were carefully combed. There was no appearance of
nervousness. George Taylor, the younger is exceedingly handsome,
his large brown eyes are lustrous and his cheeks have a ruddy
glow of a ripening peach. both men have appearance of
intelligentbusiness men who have dropped in as spectators to the
trail. Inside the bar railing the space was uncomfortably crowded
by the attorneys in the case, visiting attorneys, court
stenographers, members of the local press and reporters from the
St. Louis and Kansas City dailies. When court was called the
state said thier eight challengers to the panel of 40 had been
made. The defense issued 20 challenges which they were allowed.
The following men were chosen as jurors: Frank Yehle, James H.
Creel, J. T. NOland, Elisha Baker, J.A. Rose, Granville Jenkins,
W.R. Brammer, Barnett M. Hudson, David Jamison, Benjamin Glover,
George Fleming, and Aldoph Bogard. the jury was put in charge of
Cheif Deputy George Cummings. Judge Rucker instructed the jurors
they must not talk with anybody about the case, must not read the
newspapers and must not "string out over town." T.M.
Bresnehen Pros. Atty. for Linn Co. began reading the opening
statement at 11:o'clock. He told the story of the murder of the
Meeks family on the night of May 10, 1894, and said the state
would prove beyone all doubts that the crime was committed by
William P. and George E. Taylor, that the state would presnet
witnesses who saw the Taylors driving in a wagon on the night of
the murder, that they stopped at Gus Meek's house, that the Gus
Meeks family came out, got into the wagon with the Taylors and
drove off. The next morning May 11, Nellie Meeks went to a farm
house near George Taylor's farm and told the story of the murder.
A little boy was sent to the stack to see if the story were true,
how he saw George Taylor harrowing in a nearby field, and told
him the little girl's story and asked Taylor to go to stack with
him. George told the boy he did not have time, took the boy to
the house with him, then saddled a horse and rode rapidly to
Browning where he held a hasty consultation with his brother. The
two Taylor brothers fled going in an easterly direction. While
the citizens of Browning were wondering why the Taylors left so
suddenly the news of the murder reached town. Bresnehen described
the position of the dead bodies, he said he had a witness who was
hauling wood for George Taylor, how he had gone to George
Taylor's house early on the morning of May 11, had found George
rubbing and currying his horses which had been out in the mud and
rain the night before, how the witness saw the wagon bed covered
clotted blood, some of which had trickled through the bed and
stained the axles. The witness will say that an effort was made
to burn the wagon bed, and that the clothing of the Meeks family
was burned. He will refer to the cattle stealing case in which
Gus Meeks and the Taylors were implicated, how Meeks was pardoned
by the Governor to testify against the Taylors and how William
had said he must be gotten rid of. The defense declined to make
an opening statement but asked that witnesses be excluded from
the court room during trial. This was granted. The afternoon was
spent with witnesses being called by the state and croww examined
by Colonel Hale. The first witness was W.H. McCullom, Grundy Co.
He told how he had seen the dead bodies tumbled into a heap, the
two children lying on top of their fathers and mothers, all were
covered with blood. Dr. Van Wye, Coroner of Sullivan Co. made
similar testimony. Harris Wilson told of his visit to the Jenkins
Hill, two miles north Browning, the trail of blood on the ground
by the roadside, describe the spot where the murder was
committed, how the bodies were hauled two miles in the wagon and
buried in the straw stack. Wilson found a bull dog revolver at
the scene of the murder with three shots fired from it. Lot Lantz
of Browning duplicated Wilson's testimony. On cross examination
Lantz said he saw Wm P. Taylor go into a store in Browning about
5:30 o'clock in the morning of May 11 and buy some soda. The news
of the murder had not reached Browning at this time. Taylor had
no cause to flee. R.T.L. Curtis swore he lived about one and one
half miles from Browning, was in Browning May 11, 1895 and came
with Ike Guinn, Jonce Wilson, James Fleming and Lester Smith from
Browning to the Taylor farm arrived about 9 o'clock going by way
of the Jenkins hill. Quote, "I was doing the driving, the
other men got out, they saw sign of scuffling, where something
had been dragged, and found a resolver about 40 feet from the
road. The strawstack was about 60 rods northeast from the Geor.
Taylor house, I think I could see Geo. Taylors house, and could
see Frank Carter's house, south and a little west, about 30 rods.
There were 40 or 50 people at the straw stack when we arrived.
One of us took a fork and wnet to the stack, we found three
bodies, a man, woman and child. The quilts I saw were not with
the bodies. I knew Gus Meeks, it was his body. I saw another
child's body after they were brought to town. I went to Carter's
and saw Nellie Meeks there. She had a cut on top of her
head." Q: What tracks did you see in that field, wagon
tracks, harrow tracks or others? A: There had been harrowing done
around the straw stack and there had been wagon tracks but I did
not follow them. Q: Could you see the impression of wagon tracks?
A: Yes, Sir, they were at the edge of the straw stack to the
southeast. Q: Where were the dead bodies? A: Southwest. Q: Where
was the harrowing with reference to the straw stack. A: Seemed to
be all around the straw stack, across the field east and went on
the south side of the stack and then came back to the straw
stack. It begun on the south and east side. Q: How deep was the
hole where the bodies were? A: Probably a foot deep. Q: What time
did you go to the straw stack? A: Between 9 and 9:30. Q: What
time did you leave the straw stack 11 o'clock. Cross examination
by Hale. I went to Browning on the evening of the 10th and stayed
at Billy Pattisons. Q: Did you see George Taylor? A: Yes, about 5
o'clock. Q: Where was he? In Exchange Bank. He and Bill and Henry
Bundy were talking, I joined them, talking about a barn that was
burned. Q: Describe the wagon tracks to the jury. A: They had
been harrowed over and I didn't try to follow them at all. Q: Did
the harrowing extend around the stack? A: They were by the stack
burning but don't think they were burning much. Mrs. Kittie Edens
was called to the stand. Q: Where do you reside? A: In Browning.
Q: How far do you live from the Jenkins Hill? A: About 600 yards
southeast. Q: What, if anything did you hear on the night of Mar.
10th or the morning of the 11th, with reference to some shots? A:
I heard five shots from the southeast of my home. Q: About what
time? A: Between 12 o'clock and in the morning. Q: What did it
sound like? A: A revolver. Cross Examination. Q: Did you hear
anything else? A: No. The venerable mother of Gus Meeks, Mrs.
Martha Meeks took the stand about 3 o'clock. She is gray haired
perhaps 65 Yrs.. old, not educated but naturally educated to a
certain degree. Mr. Meeks told of the frequent visits of the
Taylor boys to her house while Gus and his family were living
there. She told how George had come to the house the night after
Gus had returned from the penitentiary and asked that Gus and his
family were living there. She told how George had come to the
house the night after Gus had returned from the penitentiary and
asked that Gus come outside as William was there to see him. Mrs.
Meeks said she was always afraid of the Taylor boys and had fears
they would murder Gus and his family and kill her. She told Gus
not to go out and he didn't but George went outside and came back
in three times wanting Gus to go out. When Gus would not go
William came in and they talked about the $1,000 which the
Taylors were going to give Gus to leave the country. Old Mrs.
Meeks was locked in another room, she could hear the
conversation. Gus held out for $1,000 but William wanted to jew
him down to $800. On the Sunday night the Taylors came and agreed
to give the $1,000. On May 10, 1894 Gus received a letter written
on paper having a heading of the People's Exchange Bank of
Browning of which William Taylor was cashier. The letter dated
May 10, 1895, read, "Be ready at 10 o'clock. Everything is
right." There was no signature but were instead three stars,
Gus handed the letter across the table, said he was going to take
the $1,000 and leave that night. Mrs. Meeks tried to persuade him
not to go fearing he and his family would be killed. That night a
wagon drove up, George Taylor came in and helped Gus carry out
the household goods. Gus told his mother William was outside but
she did not see him. On cross examination, Hale tried to weaken
the testimony by attempting to prove she did not know the Taylor
brothers very well but she pointed to each in turn and identified
him. The letter spoken of earlier was brought to court and the
writing was identified as that of William Taylor. W.H. Jones of
Browning told about seeing George Taylor drive out toward the
Milan road at dusk on the evening of May 10. John I. Russell, a
neighbor of William Taylor testified to the same thing.
INDIVIDUAL RECORD FOR GUS L. MEEKS - PFEIFFE3.PAF 3 Jul 1997 Page
12 of 14
==========================================================================================================================
E.M. McCullum not only saw George Taylor drive out in a wagon
toward the scene of the murder but he saw William Taylor walking
down the railroad tracks in Browning in a direction to intersect
the route taken by George. John Hoak's testimony: I lived 4 miles
north of Browning on the night of the Meeks murder. I was south
of our house about 300 yards, about four and a quarter miles from
Browning. I know Wm. P. Taylor but not George. I saw Wm. Taylor
about 10 o'clock that evening driving along the road at a rapid
rate in a lumber wagon traveling north. There were two in the
wagon, I was about ten feet from the wagon. It was a light night,
the moon was shining. On cross examination he said he was 15 year
old, went to Browning about once a week, that his father had
pointed out Wm. Taylor to him; had often been in the bank where
Wm. Taylor worked, that he first knew William Taylor seven years
ago, was subpoenaed as a witness last Sunday, never had a talk
with the attorney about what he was to say, that when he met Wm.
Taylor in the road he was with a boy 12 years old, Clarence
Whitaker, who did not know the Taylors. Wm. Taylor was on the
west side, dressed in dark clothes, had on a black hat, that the
horses looked like dark bays, that the man driving had ling,
black whiskers and was not Wm. Taylor. Court opened Wednesday
morning, at 8o'clock the court house was crowded with more ladies
present than on Tuesday. D.C. Pierce was called as first witness.
He testified to a conversation he had held with George Taylor
when Meeks was pardoned. He (Pierce) had spoken to George about
Meeks coming home to testify against him and Wm. in the cattle
stealing case, George replied. "We will get the --- out of
the way." Pierce had told George and his brother were not on
good terms with Gus Meeks. George replied, "Oh well Frank
Leonard is all right with him and can attend to that." On
cross examination Hale tried to point out that Taylor had
intimated Leonard would kill Meeks, but witness was inclined to
believe that George meant Leonard could be used as a tool to kill
Meeks. A.R. Dillinger, living six miles north of Browning,
testified that in a conversation with Bill Taylor about Gus Meeks
going to testify against him and George, Bill Taylor said,
"I will kill the d-n ---." His testimony could not be
shaken. Mrs. John Carter, next witness gave a strong testimony
for the state. It was at the house of Mrs. Carter Nellie Meeks
called the morning after the murder. The Carter farm ajoins the
George Taylor farm. Mrs. Carter is 53 years old and has lived in
the vicinity of Browning since childhood. She reported, "I
got up at 4 o'clock on the morning of May 11. Between 5 and 6 in
the morning a little girl came crying to the door. When asked
where she had slept, she said in a straw stack. When asked where
the straw stack was she pointed out a straw stack about 75 yards
away on the George Taylor farm. The little girl's face was
covered with blood and dirt. She had a gash cut in the top of her
head and her hair was clotted with blood. She carried her cape
and hood in her hand and kept crying and telling about her little
sister being in the straw stack. I sent my nine year old nephew,
Jimmie Carter, to find the straw stack and report to me. I asked
her name and she said it was Nellie Meeks, Gus Meeks' child and
her pa and ma were lying up the road. I stepped out to see where
Jimmie was and saw him walking across a field with a man that
looked like George Taylor." She was asked to identify Nellie
Meeks. Nellie has a round rosy face, bright blue eyes and light
brown hair that hangs in ringlets. She wore a tam-o-shanter cap
and cloak of brown. Mrs. Carter visited the strawstack later in
the day and saw the dead bodies. She notified some of her
relatives and sent Elihu Harvey, 16 Yrs.. old to Browning to
report the murders. Jimmy Carter, age 9 years, brown eyes, brown
hair, gave this testimony. "I first saw Nellie Meeks coming
up the walk drying. She said her sister was in the straw stack
and my aunt sent me to see about it. In the field on the way I
met George Taylor and told him what the little girl had said. I
asked him to go with me but he said to wait, I must go to the
barn lot and let some one else to the stack. He made me hold the
team. "He asked if the little girl said anything about her
father and mother, I told him she said her pa and ma were lying
down there in the road. He put a saddle on a horse in the barn
lot and rode away. I then went to the straw stack, pushed the
straw back and saw the bodies." D.B. Gooch, who lives 1 1/2
miles from George Taylor said he had gone to the straw stack and
saw the dead bodies under 2 1/2 ft of straw. He said a wagon had
been driven in the from the public road to the stack, back across
the meadow and plowed ground straight to George Taylor's house.
Mr. Gooch and six other men followed the wagon tracks. A man's
foot print, who wore a size 8 or 9 shoe was seen along the wagon
tracks leading to the Taylor home. (George Taylor wears a size
8.) On Crossex, Mr. Gooch said the bodies had been buried in a
pit 4 ft. long, 2 feet wide and 1 foot deep. Hale said he
proposed to prove that a mob of 50 or 75 men had ridden into
Brookfield on June 28, 1894 and threatened to kill the Taylors.
Gooch was asked if he were armed that night. Objection sustained.
He was asked if he wore a handkerchief over his face that night.
Objection sustained. J.W. Gibson, who lives 2 1/2 miles west of
George Taylor, told how someone had harrowed around the stack. In
cross examination it was brought out George Taylor had married a
cousin of the witness, but witness said he and George Taylor were
not on good terms, and he had no use for George Taylor after the
arson case came up against his brother William. James L. Harris,
hired hand for Taylor took the stand. He stated he went from
George Gibson's house to George Taylor's about 5:30 the morning
of May 11, 1894. He found George Taylor washing the mud from his
horses as if they had been out the night before in the rain.
Witness said he had hitched up Jim Taylor's team to haul wood. He
noticed the wagon bed and axles were bloody, there was a strong
oder of coal oil and an attempt had been made to burn out the
blood stains. Later in the day Harris said the Taylors came by
there, left there horses and walked off through the wood. That
was when the Taylors took their flight. When witness Harris was
telling his story of the blood stains, Bill Taylor seemed to be
in a brown study and scratched the capital letter "M"
on the back of the chair. Later in the day George Taylor
scratched an "M" on the back of a chair. Harris said he
had been arrested shortly after the Meeks murder and bound over
to the Grand Jury but he didn't know the charge against him.
Pros. Atty. Bresnehen had him arrested in order to bring him
before the Grand Jury to testify. Hale asked Harris if he had not
been arrested on suspicion of having been implicated in the Meeks
murder. He said he had been closely questioned by a number of men
but they were wanting to know where the Taylors had gone, and he
did not know. John B. Harris, brother of James, said he examined
the wagon bed and saw the blood spots, that he knew his brother
had been arrested, but did not know it because of implication in
the murder but rather to be used as a State's witness. Edward
Barton, sheriff of Linn Co., at time of Meeks murder said he saw
blood stains on the wagon. The defense brought out the fact Jim
Taylor, (father of the boys) told some children had been playing
in some straw in the wagon and set fire to it, thus explaining
away the charge that somebody had tried to burn out the blood
stains. Only a few small stains remained after the fire, it seems
the fire sought out the stains. Jim Cornett, a slim middle aged
man, 7 feet tall, told he had found blood stains on the wagon bed
at George Taylors, and he had heard James Harris was held in jail
as a witness, Hale attempted to shift part of the blame murder to
Harris but failed. Cornett said excitement in Linn County was
high after the Taylors fled and he had heard a posse and blood
hounds has tried to track the brothers down. Peter McDonald of
Browning testified he saw Bill Taylor returning home about 5
o'clock on the morning of May 11. M.L. Gibson, Postmaster, and he
saw the two Taylors at 8 o'clock, May 11, and they had ridden
away on their horses. David Beachman of Browning swore he saw
George Taylor ride in early on May 11, and about half an hour
later both men got on their horses and rode away. J.D. Jessee, a
preacher testified he was riding from the north to Browning on
the morning of May 11, and met the Taylors about 8 o'clock riding
their horses in a gallop and urging them on. The murder was not
reported in Browning until about 9 o'clock. Jerry South, member
of the Arkansas legislature took the stand. An audible whisper
went through the crowd, "That's the fellow who captured the
Taylor boys." He was examined by A.W. Mullins of the
prosecution. He stated his home was in Mountain Home, Ark., was
serving his third term in the Arkansas Legislature and that he
first saw the defendants in Buffalo City, Ark. June 20 or 21,
1894. Next he saw the defendants on June 25 in Buffalo City. The
Taylors were stopping at a house run by a man, the name of Hays.
There were no hotels in Buffalo City. One of the men said his
name was Edwards, the other Price. South said he knew everyone in
the county and knew the men were strangers. Quote "At the
dinner table, William watched me suspiciously and seemed nervous.
I remembered something I had read about the Meeks and Taylors in
The St. Louis Republican. I checked in a newspaper office and
found pictures and descriptions which fitted the Taylors. Later
South and Taylors met in a little store and South decided he had
the right men. He got his breach loading shotgun and went out.
The Taylors were several hundred yards away. He ran up the sandy
road within firing range, and yelled at the to stop. Both men
were in shirt sleeves. Bill put his hand back to draw his gun but
South had his gun leveled at them. They gave up without any
incident when South showed them their photographs in the paper
they acknowledged their identity. Taylors told South they were
going to separate and leave Buffalo, Ark. that night. South took
them to Little Rock, from there to St. Louis where he was met by
Sheriff Barton of Linn County. Barton put the handcuffs on the
Taylors at St. Louis but removed them before reaching Macon.
South accompanied the party to Macon. In conversation Wm. asked
South what he had heard about them. South mentioned the letter,
Wm. said he might admit writing the letter offering Meeks money
but would prove an alibi, that the Meeks family was followed and
murdered by someone else. Wm. also said he might say he had given
the $1,000 and the team and wagon to the Meeks, but someone else
had murdered them and buried them on the Taylor farm to throw
suspicion on the Taylors. When asked why, if innocent, they had
left Browning so hurriedly. Wm. replied, at the proper time a man
would come forth and tell how he had notified George early in the
morning and they had fled to escape mob violence. On cross
examination South said the Taylors admitted the went to Milan on
the night of May 10, 1894, got the Meeks family but left the
family in the wagon at 2 o'clock in the morning. They also told
that George helped carry out the household goods and Wm. remained
in the wagon. South continued, "At that time I was convinced
the Taylors were innocent and I gave them honest advice. I told
them not to deny writing the letter to the Meeks family because
someone would prove he had. I told them they would better
predicate their defense on some other theory: They knew I was a
lawyer and listened attentively." Hale, on cross
examination, insisted South give the exact language used by the
Taylors during the conversation but he refused saying it would be
foolish to try to do so after 10 months. Hale tried to show South
had made negotiations with the Taylors in advance, they were to
give themselves up but only after a show of force, then South and
Taylors would divide the reward money. Mr. South said he was paid
$1,500 by Linn County for the Taylors capture but Governor Stone
told South he would not be paid the $600 offered by the State
unless the Taylors were convicted. By innuendo Hale tried to
convey the impression South was testifying for the defense in
order to get the $600. After two hours of questioning South left
the stand which closed the States testimony. Virgil Conkling, a
big bluff, Democratic politician conducted the examination for
the defense. Colonel A.W. Myers, a venerable lawyer of
Brookfield, whose chief duty seemed to be hunting witnesses for
the defense and inducing them to sign their names to written
statements. Most of the defense testimony was given by relatives
of the Taylors. Beverly Gibson, whose wife is a sister of the
Taylors said he had visited the strawstack, had seen the dead
bodies, had examined the wagon bed, and had followed the wagon
tracks from the strawstack to the George Taylor farm. He said the
wagon bed had once been painted red and the paint had worn off
leaving only spots. John H. Gibson a cousin of George Taylor's
wife swore the essentially the same testimony as given by Beverly
Gibson. He said he found some bed clothing over the bodies at the
stack and that it had been on fire. Mr. James J. Taylor mother of
the boys took the stand next. She is 55 Yrs.. old, gray hair,
dark eyes and was dressed in black. She was cool and collected.
While she was testifying Bill Taylor became nervous and chewed on
strips of note paper, but George, as usual, sat like a stone
statue. She swore she was at home May 11, 1894, and the news of
the murder and the accusation of her sons was brought to her. She
said she went out and looked at the wagon bed, there were no
blood stains, just spots of red paint. She said her sons names
were George Edward and William Price. The Taylor brothers went as
Mr. Edwards and Mr. Price. William Gibson, uncle of George's wife
swore he had visited the strawstack, saw the bodies and heard the
crowd accusing the Taylor brothers. He had found no blood on the
wagon. He admitted he found a bushel of red clay in George
Taylor's barnyard that had been rubbed off the wagon. The Milan
road to the Meeks house is over red clay roads. He admitted the
wagon tracks led from the stack to George's farm. Alpha Van Wye a
young lady who worked in a restaurant in Browning swore she and
her mother were walking to the home of Blythe McCullom at 10
o'clock on the night of May 10, 1894 and met Wm. Taylor coming
out of the Bank and he spoke to her. She swore she and her mother
had sat up all night with Mrs. McCullom who was sick. McCullom
testified for the state yesterday and stated Mr. and Miss
McCullom were not at his house. Clarence Whitaker, 13 yr. old son
of Alfred Whitaker, living on Oscar Heads farm 4 miles north of
Browning, on the Milan read, swore he had not been with Johnie
Hook, fishing, on the night of May 10, 1894, that they had not
seen the Taylors nor spoken of them. John Brumbaugh, a farmer,
and Oscar Head swore the Hook boys reputation for truth and
veracity was bad, although on cross examination, they said they
had not seen him many times. A deposition of Mrs. Edna Ogle, of
Wheeling, Mo. stated she had seen Mrs. Mattie Van Wye at the home
of Blythe McCullom, May 10, 1895. Charles Taylor, youngest
brother of the defendant took the stand. He is smooth faced,
black haired, of slim build. On the night of the murder he was at
his father's house. May 11, 1894 he was in the timber and heard
of the murder. He went to the stack and heard the crowd accuse
his brothers. He examined the wagon but found no blood stains. He
had seen his brothers leave their horses in the woods and leave
on foot. James C. Taylor, father, 54 Yrs.. old born and reared in
Linn county, stated he had five sons, William the oldest and
George next. George lived about 1/2 mile west of his parents.
George was at his house at 2 o'clock on May 10, 1894. He had
brought over a bucket of cabbage plants. George took his fathers
team to go to Browning to haul his wagon wheels to get the tires
set. The next morning when the team was brought home they showed
no evidence of being driven hard. He stated it was 20 miles from
George's farm to the Meeks place and the team did not look as if
it had been driven that far, 40 miles. While in the timber, May
11, George and Bill came riding up, left their horses and walked
off. Something seemed wrong. Going to the house, Mrs. Meeks
(should be Taylor) informed her husband of what had happened. He
learned Bill and George were being accused. The crowd at the
stack said if they were guilty the murdered bodies had been
hauled in my wagon. He went home, examined the wagon, saw no
blood stains. The wagon bed got burned when some grandchildren
were playing around a fire under a kettle and got the bed afire.
Mr. Taylor said he saw no wagon tracks and had not gone over to
George's house for 3 or 4 days after the murder. He stated when
George and Wm. walked away he saw a big revolver sticking out of
his pocket. He denied he ever told Daniel Nichols, a neighbor, he
thought his wagon had been used to haul the Meeks family. James
C. Harris had returned the wagon May 11, 1894, but had failed to
say anything to him about blood stains. Mr. Taylor had tried to
coerce John Harris, brother of James, to make a statement he had
seen no blood on the wagon. Mrs. David Gibson, mother-in-law of
George Taylor swore she saw George Taylor at his own home about 3
o'clock May 10, 1894. He was preparing to take his wagon wheels
to Browning. She returned to her own home a short distance away,
George's wife and baby going with her. After supper they all
returned to George's house, spending the night, she and her
husband sleeping upstairs. George's wife was about to be
confined. About 9 o'clock I went downstairs and saw George. He
had off his coat, vest and shoes. In the morning she went
downstairs and George was in bed. She went home. She gave various
times as to when she saw George ride away from home on the
morning of May 11. She returned to George's house but did not see
Jimmie Carter holding George's team and she did not go to the
Carter house a short distance away to see little Nellie as
everyone was doing. Mrs. Anna Cooper, Milan, who lives a few
blocks from Martha J. Meeks, the mother of Gus, testified Mrs.
Meeks told her on the morning of May 11, 1894, she did not know
who rode away with the Meeks family but supposed it was the
Taylor boys. Witness had gone into the Meeks home just before
John P. Butler, an attorney had gone out. He had brought the
telegram telling of the murder, Witness said she first told of
conversation to David M. Wilson, an attorney of Milan, who is
engaged by the defense. Witness admitted she heard Mrs. Meeks
tell Mrs. Anna Johnson in her presence it was the Taylor boys who
took the Gus Meeks family away. Mrs. Anna Johnson testified she
lived next door to "old lady Meeks", house. She told of
the conversation in front of Mrs. Cooper, that Mrs. Meeks told
her she did not know who took the family away but supposed it was
the "old Taylor boys, and that none of the men came into the
house. On cross she could not explain why Mr. Wilson sent for
her. Mrs. Cooper and Mrs. Johnson are washer women and were used
in attempt to offset the testimony of Mrs. Meeks who had stated
George Taylor came in and helped carry out things. Mrs. George
Taylor, wife of defendant George Taylor, came to the stand. She
carried her baby who became fretful and George's mother came
forward and took the child. Mrs. George Taylor is only nineteen
years, of heavy physique, blue eyes, fair complexion, light brown
hair, rosy cheeks. She wore a dark blue dress and small black hat
trimmed in green ribbons, and black cloth gloves. She spoke in a
low tone and simply followed the alibi theory by swearing that
her husband took some wagon wheels to Browning on May 10 and that
he slept in her bed all night May 10. Mrs. Maude Taylor, wife of
Wm. Taylor, took the stand. She is a good looking brunette, large
brown eyes, medium size about 30 Yrs.. old, dressed in black and
wore a black hat. She was cool and collected, said she and Bill
Taylor were married in 1886, had 3 girls, age 7, 5, 3. Testimony:
She was at home in Browning May 10, 1894, Bill went downtown
after supper came home about 10 o'clock and went to bed, arose at
5, and had breakfast at 6. George ate supper with them May 10,
after supper George left in a wagon. On cross she was asked if
she had not told Rev. P.M. Best a few days after the murder her
husband had been away from home on the night of the murder and
did not return home until morning, that when he left he had told
her he would be gone all night and maybe a day or two; that she
told Rev. Best she had prayed her husband would be cleared on all
previous charges against him, but had lost all hope. She denied
in to the conversation with Mr. Best. She was asked if Bill had
told her he was going to take the Meeks family out of the country
and she had asked where the family were and he had told her
George's. She denied this and was dismissed. Bill Taylor was
called to the stand at 9:30 a.m. As he stood with his right hand
upraised to be sworn, the heavens began rumbling and roaring with
peals of thunder, as if the elements were angry. Bill was cool
and collected, dressed neatly in a black suit. He said, "I
was born and reared in the neighborhood of Browning and lived in
Browning at the time the trouble occurred. I am 33 years old. I
was educated in the common schools. I am an attorney by
profession, and read law with D.M. Brinkley of Browning. I was
admitted to the bar in Linneus in 1885. M.E.B. Fields, the
attorney for the State here, read law in my office. I was mayor
of Browning in 1888 and elected to the state legislature. I am
the Cashier of the People's Saving Bank of Browning. "George
Taylor, my brother, came in with some wagon wheels in a wagon
about 4 o'clock in the afternoon of May 10, 1894. He ate supper
at my house and about dark hitched up his team and went home to
the country. I remained in the house about an hour and went
downtown to the bank. I frequently had work to do in the bank at
night, for I attended to nearly all the work there. "I left
the bank about 10 o'clock that night and went home and stayed
there all night in bed. I arose about 5 o'clock next morning,
went down town and bought some soda. I went downtown that morning
again about 8 o'clock to open the bank and a few minutes later
George came up and said there were some dead people don on his
place and he thought the man was Gus Meeks. He wanted to get an
officer to take down there. After talking the matter over I
advised him not to get an officer. I told him I believed Meeks
had been murdered and placed on his (George's) place in order to
get us in trouble and we should better wait and see what
developed. "It was a general rumor over the country that
Meeks had been pardoned out of the penitentiary to swear against
brother George and I in the cattle stealing case. We had many
enemies and concluded we would ride away and stay in hiding until
we heard and saw what the people would do. We anticipated that a
mob would be raised against us by our enemies. Just before this
murder I had received a letter from Gus Meeks." A letter was
produced, he identified it as the one he had received from Gus
Meeks. Attorneys for the state examined it about 5 minutes.
Everyone wanted to see Wm. Taylor, necks were craned and men,
women and children climbed on benches to get a look. Taylor
continued. "Meeks had his house burned and it was insured.
The policy was for $400. I went up to Milan and Meeks told me he
wanted the insurance money because he had to get out of the
country. He said he had committed a crime in Indiana and they had
found out where he was and he had to get out. He wanted to sell
me the policy. I agreed to give him $50. He said he had a man to
move him out of the country. I never offered him $1,000. I knew
he was out of the penitentiary to swear against me. Meeks told me
he had told several parties that he was going to get $1,000 from
me to get him to leave the country. "I was at Cora on
Tuesday, May 8, 1894 and he wrote me on Wednesday to meet him on
Friday. I haven't that letter. I wrote my folks while I was at
St. Joe to send me my letters but that letter from Meeks could
not bet found. The purpose of that letter was for me to meet him
at Cora on Friday, May 11 and to come up on the freight that goes
through Browning at 9"30 A.M. It was my intention to meet
Meeks at Cora on May 11. On Cross examination Bill Taylor said,
"Yes, old Mrs. Meeks had sued me on the same insurance
policy on which Gus Meeks wanted to realize. Gus Meeks had
already testified in the arson case against me. He told me he had
promised to swear to anything they wanted him to swear against me
in the cattle stealing case. I met Meeks and assisted him in his
preparation to leave the country, because I was quite willing
that he should go. I left Cora on foot May 8, after seeing Meeks
and walked home to Browning, six miles." About the letter to
Meeks stating, "Be ready at 10 o'clock everything is all
right." Taylor admitted he wrote it. Asked who had informed
George about the murder, Bill said, "George told me a little
boy came up to him in the field where he was harrowing and told
him there were dead bodies in the straw stack. George said he
harrowed on around the field until he came to the stack, when he
looked and saw the body of a man and new it was Gus Meeks. He
then saddled his horse and came to Browning to tell me. George
Taylor was also cool and collected. He stated he was born in
California while his parents lived there a few years and was 30
years of age. He said, "On May 10, 1894, I left home between
3 and 4 o'clock in father's wagon, and had father's team to take
my wagon wheels to town. It had rained the night before & was
somewhat muddy. My brother Albert rode two miles with me to see a
man and I drove on to Browning alone. I ate supper at Brother
Bill's, and left town about dusk in the wagon. I got home about 9
o'clock and remained there the balance of the night. My
father-in-law and mother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. David Gibson slept
upstairs at my home that night. "I got up about 5 o'clock
the next morning May 11, and curried the mud off the horses.
After breakfast Jim Harris and young William Gibson took my
father's wagon home. I started to harrow in the field around the
straw stack. The field was planted in corn. "I harrowed
around the vicinity of the straw stack because that was the
highest and driest part of the field, it had rained and the other
portion was too damp. I had started to lay off a land near the
stack and had harrowed only a short time when a little boy came
up to me and said a little girl had come to his house and told
that her two little sisters were in the straw stack and that her
pa and ma were up there in the road somewhere. :I drove the
harrow on around the land until I came to the stack, and stopped.
I kicked away some straw, and saw the face of the dead whom I
recognized as Gus Meeks. I went to the house, got on a horse and
rode to town and had a talk with Bill. "We concluded that it
was a job set upon us to get us into trouble and we thought it
best to get away. We had a great many enemies and we thought
there would be trouble. Bill and I rode our horses south of
Browning and left them with our father and brother in the timber
and then proceeded on foot." On Crossex., George denied he
had told little Jimmie Carter to go with him to the house when
the boy told him of the murder, he denied he made the boy hold
his horses while he saddled a horse to ride away. He remained in
Browning but a few minutes when Bill got his horse and fled.
George said he found no bed clothes on fire at the straw stack.
After he recognized Gus Meeks he drove the harrow across the
field to the barn lot. He made only a brief search of the straw
stack. He saw only the face of Gus Meeks. He left when he saw his
face. States rebuttal: Gus Corbin, Circuit Clerk and Recorder of
Adair Co. testified he had an indictment against Bill and George
Taylor for passing a forged check for $2,000. He had papers
showing they were convicted. The record of the indictments
against the two Taylors were for the murder of the Meeks family,
the attempt with assault to kill on Nellie Meeks, the record of
the indictment against William P. Taylor for arson, also for the
larceny of cattle. The defense objected since the Taylors were
being tried for the murder of Gus Meeks. Objection sustained.
Israel Wood of Milan went on stand to impeach the testimony of
Mrs. Johnson, defense witness. He said Mrs. Johnson's reputation
for chastity was bad. JA Niblo of Milan, who is serving his
second term as Sheriff of Sullivan Co., swore Mrs. Johnson's
reputation for chastity and truth and veracity was very bad. C.S.
Hart, a grocer at Milan, swore the same. Theodore S. Poole swore
Mrs. Johnson was a bad egg". Mrs. David Henley, an old lady
living near Browning, swore Mrs. Gibson, George's mother-in-law
had told her George had gone to town with some wagon wheels but
did not get home until 4 o'clock in the morning. Mathias Martin,
who lives on the road running from Milan to George Taylors, saw
George in town about 6 o'clock. He went home, ate supper and sat
under a maple tree in his yard about 40 feet from the road, and
he did not see George pass by going home. State Rested. The case
was given to the jury Tuesday night, April 9, 1895. Verdict, jury
failed to agree. On ballot, for conviction was: J.A. Rose, Dave
Jameson, Adolph Auer, Grandville Jenkins, Elijah Baker, Jas. H.
Creel, W.R. Brammer; for acquittal: Frank Yehle, Barnett M.
Hudson, Ben Glover, Geo. Fleming and J.T. Noland. They jury was
dismissed. The case tried again on a later docket. The trail
began Mar. 29, 1895. Carrollton, Mo., Apr. 29, 1895. A special
grand jury is to be called to investigate the charges of bribery
against the jury in the Taylor case; and also charges of perjury
against some of the defense witnesses. It is expected more than
one indictment will be returned. May 3, 1895, from Quincy Daily
Hearld. Little Nellie Meeks, the eight year old survivor was
brought from St. Joe to Quincy by Bert Martin. Nellie had been
putting in a week at the museum at St. Joe and enormous business
was done. She had her first night at the Eden last night and a
big crowd attended. Nellie is quite a pretty girl, with a healthy
face and a long mass of yellow hair. The scar on her head can be
seen where she was hit with an ax club and left for dead. She
talks plainly of all her recollections of the event. She has to
be watched closely, even her victuals have to be watched, lest
some on poison her. She will receive a fat sum for her engagement
with Martin and Taylor and will be able to leave Browning and
attend School elsewhere. July 25, 1895, the business of selecting
a jury in the case of State vs Taylor began today. All witnesses
in the case are instructed to be in Carrollton by Wednesday
afternoon July 31. The jury selected are: E.J. Calloway, F.G.
Ceaser, T.N. Haughton, John M. Edge, G.W. Shank, G.T. Morris,
W.H. Vaughn, George Freeman, B.C. Dulaney, G.W. Craig, J.S. Helm
and R.G. Evans, seven farmers, a lumber dealer, a bank clerk, a
stonemason and two carpenters. W.S. Snow was placed in charge.
Not a great deal of new testimony was introduced. Gus Meeks'
pistol found on Jenkins Hill was brought to court. The most
damaging testimony was that of D.C. Pierce who said George Taylor
had told him, he (George) had no fear of Gus Meeks, as they would
get him out of the way. "Frank Leonard and him is all right
and Frank will attend to that." The most feared witness is
Mrs. Sallie Carter. It was to her house Nellie made her way after
the murder. Mrs. Carter said she sat on the fence and watched her
nephew tell George about the incident, and watched George Taylor
drive away from the field without looking in the straw stack.
"How could he know it was Gus Meeks in the straw stack
unless he looked." Nellie Meeks was in court. She is the
ward of Mrs. Pierce. Nellie went to where the counsel for the
state was sitting and climbed into the lap of Pros. Attorney
Pierce of Sullivan Co. Wm. Taylor seemed interested in her but
George glanced at her, with a cold hard look. A few days after
the murder Detective Freeman discovered in a woods pasture on the
farm of James Taylor, where a fire had been built, and something
burned. He gathered the fragments, sealed them in an envelope,
and kept them in a bank vault until introduced today. They were a
piece of cloth from a pair of trousers, a scrap of bed ticking,
pieces of a pocket book, comb and picture frame. Mrs. Meeks,
mother of Gus, stated Gus and family were living with her and had
been at the time of the murder. That he took a pair of trousers
in his trunk and the piece looked like them. The part of the
pocket book looked like his, but wasn't sure, that they took a
feather bed covered with similar ticking, he had a picture frame
made of 100 different kinds of wood. She could not positively
identify the pistol but Gus took his the night of the murder. The
defense brought in as witness Josie Bailey, 12 yrs. old, who said
"I live 3 1/2 miles southeast of Browning and about one mile
north of George Taylor's. On the wagon between 8 and 9 o'clock
nearer 9. I was just over the fence from the road, it was a
bright moonlight night and I saw him plainly, I was after the
cows." Dr. Craig of New Salem testified that character of
James Harris was bad in the community were the Dr. lived, but
James Harris lived ten miles away and he didn't know what it was
there. Albert Taylor, a brother of Bill and George, stated he
started to Browning with George, went two miles with him, saw
Jesse Hinley about some shoats, returned to his father's, ate
supper, saddled a horse and went visiting, then went to George's
house to get the mail, found George unhitching the team, assisted
him, then went home arriving about 9:25. He also told of his
brother's flight when they came to the timber and how he had
examined the wagon for blood and found none. Mrs. Gibson,
George's mother-in-law, swore the baby cried in the night, went
downstairs about 12 o'clock for it and saw George in bed. Katie
Bailey, sister of Josie, swore she had seen George Taylor coming
down the road 120 yards from her and recognized him.; The
testimony of the Taylors was the same as at the prior trial. Both
sides rested and the case was given to the jury Aug. 2, 1895. The
strain of the trial is beginning to show on the Taylors. The jury
reached a verdict of guilty Friday afternoon, after a
deliberation of 1 1/2 hours. The defendants were cool, the jury
was polled and then discharged. The judge sentenced the Taylors
to hang. Bill was hanged April 30, 1896 but George escaped.
Jefferson City, March 3, 1896. In the Supreme Court today the
appeal case of the Taylor brothers was argued. The Transcript of
the case is lengthy consisting of over 1,600 pages of typewritten
matter. Assistant Attorney General appeared for the state and
R.F. Lazier and Virgil Conkling of Carrollton, and D.M. Wilson of
Milan for the defense. The State Supreme Court affirms the
decision of the lower court and sets Thursday, April 30, 1896 as
the execution date for the Taylors. As usual George Taylor took
this decision in a quiet manner but Bill looked as thought the
last hope was gone. April 11, 1896: Bill and George Taylor made
an attempt to break jail at Carrolltion at 8:30 Saturday night.
George succeed but Bill was recaptured. Night watchman Shelton
was in the jail at 8:20 and everything was all right. He went
into the backyard, was talking to a friend when he heard a noise
at the opposite corner of the jail. He rushed to that corner and
saw Lee Cunningham, who was also in jail for murder, sliding down
a hose to the ground where he was taken by Shelton. Bill Taylor
who was about halfway down shouted to Shelton not to shoot, he
would give himself up. He told Shelton, George was still on the
roof. Shelton stood guard but George never showed. He had
evidently gone down the hose first and Bill's statement gave him
more time to get away. On examination of the jail it was found a
bolt had been cut in the back on one of the cells and a bar
knocked off. This gave the prisoners access to the corridor. They
went up on top of the cage into the garret through the scuttle
and onto the roof. They took a 50 foot hose with them which they
fastened to the roof. Blood hounds were put on the trail of
George, posses are out, but no substantial lead has been found.
The blood hounds could only track him to the back gate. It is
thought he was picked up in a buggy. Yound Leonard of Norborne, a
brother-in-law of Bill Taylor was in Carrollton today. Since
supper he took a rig from the livery stable and drove out of
town. A telephone message from Norborne says a team arrived there
10 o'clock that had been driven hard but who the driver was is
not known. Kansas City, Mo. April 13, Bill Taylor was brought
here this afternoon from Carrollton for safe keeping. In an
interview with Taylor, who is licked up in murders' row at the
jail Bill said "I tasted the air of freedom for a few
moments. It was the sweetest breath for many a weary day. A man
has to be penned up in jail to appreciate liberty, free air and
the lights of heaven. If I had been a moment sooner or a minute
later I should be with George now. He is having lots of hardships
and I would like to help bear them. We were unfortunate the
deputy sheriff discovered us by accident. We had our escape well
planned and had got clear of the jail and had not been missed
when one of the two deputies who were on guard walked outside the
jail and discovered us. He cornered me but George was still on
the roof. It was 25 feet to the ground but George jumped off the
opposite side of the jail. It is thought George may have escaped
by climbing down the smokestack of the furnace on the east side
of the jail. The people of Carrollton is in an angry mood as well
as those of Linn and Sullivan counties. They believe it was
through the carelessness of Sheriff Stanley that George Taylor
escaped. They say no effort is being made to capture George and
more angry men converged on Carrollton. Some think the Taylors
were buying their way out. Deputy Sheriff Wilson demanded Bill be
returned to the Linneus jail. Wilson became very angry. Shaking
his fist in Sheriff Stanley's face he said, "you let Bill
Taylor escape and the people up my way will come down and lynch
you. We came close to doing it as it was." The sheriff stole
away from the jail with Bill Taylor in a hack in time to catch
the 10:44 train on the Santa Fe to Kansas City. April 24, 1896:
It is now known Bill Taylor was not removed to Kansas City to
thwart a lynching but because it was feared George would return
and try to rescue him. It is positively known George Taylor is
within a few miles of Carrollton but had eluded capture. It is
thought there has been a leak in the sheriff's plans, enabling
George to keep tab on his pursuers and change his hiding place
accordingly. Also it is known he is armed and exceedingly
dangerous. May 1, 1896: W.P. Taylor was hung at 11 o'clock sharp
Thursday, April 30, 1896. He walked on the scaffold, stood alone
while the straps were put on and he was cool and did not show a
tremor. He moved his head for the rope to be adjusted. A priest
prayed while the trap was sprung. Taylor had sent for a priest
Wednesday afternoon and was baptized into the Catholic Church.
His parents were members of the Christian Church. Taylor had been
polite, courteous and respectful to everyone who visited him. The
Taylor's fortune has been greatly diminished from the time of
their first lawsuit and that is thought to be the reason for the
apathy shown by their lawyers except Conkling who is a sort of a
bulldog and holds on until the last ditch is reached. When the 10
o'clock Sante Fe rolled into Carrollton hundreds of people met
the train. Taylor was handcuffed and guarded by 13 deputies. He
was placed in a carriage and driver rapidly to the jail, the
guards followed in a bus and they displayed rifles and shot guns
on every hand. When he arrived at the jail he was thoroughly
searched. In a little card about 3 1/2 inches square was found 1
1/2 grains of strychnine. Taylor was stripped while doing this
they noticed he had something in his mouth. This proved to be a
saw about two inches long which he said he used to his finger
nails. Bill Taylor left the following written statements:
Carrollton, Mo. April 30, 1896: "To the Public: I have only
this additional statement to make. I ought not to suffer as I am
compelled to do. Prejudice and prejury convicted me. By this
conviction my wife to be left a lonely widow, my babies are made
orphans in a cold world, my brothers mourn and friends weep. You
hasten my gray-haired father and mother to the grave. The mobs
and the element have haunted me to the grave. I had hoped to at
least live till the good people realized the injustice done me
but it cannot be so. I feel prepared to meet my God, and now wing
my way to the great unknown, where I believe everyone is properly
judged. I hope my friends will meet me all in heaven. I believe I
am going there. Good by all. W.P. Taylor." He also signed
and gave to Father Kenne this statement: "Certificate. I the
undersigned believing that in the event of my death that the
truth concerning the condition of my soul should be told at my
funeral. I do hereby testify that I have been born again, by
believing in the Lord Jesus Christ. If I die tonight I will go to
heaven. W.P. Taylor, April 29, 1896." As the time of
execution father Kennedy and Taylor knelt in prayer. Taylor
kissed the crucifix. Taylor was clean and shaved. He wrote a note
to the newspaper men saying, "One of the men guarding me is
Harry Wilson, a Linn County mobber." At 6 o'clock he was
given his breakfast, two fried eggs, three buttered biscuits and
a tin cup of coffee. At 7:30 a mass was held for Taylor, and the
last sacrament was administered. The town was literally full of
henders of people from adjoining counties and Linn and Sullivan
counties. The funeral was held at the Catholic Church in
Carrollton Friday afternoon and the body interred in the Catholic
cemetery. His immediate family attended. The people were
permitted to view the remains at the church. A handsome gray
granite monument marks the spot where Bill lies. It bears this
inscription: "William P. Taylor born Sept. 22, 1861, died
April 30, 1896." George was never captured, thought for
years his appearance was reported at various parts of the
country. Rumors said he fought honorably in the Spanish American
War, others said he left the country, some said he returned and
visited his family, but he was never apprehended by the law.
Nellie grew to womanhood and married Albert Spray of North Salem.
She died in 1910 shortly after giving birth to a daughter Hattie.