FULL
TEXT (Article 1 of 2): Jersey City, N. J., May 19 – Seventeen-year-old Gladys MacKnight was
portrayed in court today as a cool young woman who asked “Where’s the
old man” after her arrest on a charge of hacking her mother to death with a
hatchet.
The
girl, on trial for her life with Donald Wightman, 18, her former sweetheart,
for the slaying of Mrs. Helen MacKnight, 47, Bayonne club woman, also “wanted
to see the newspapers,” a witness said. Gladys, in the same, navy blue outfit
she has worn since her trial began, stared at Emily C. Hassmiller, Bayonne
policewoman, as she gave this testimony.
The
girl’s tennis togs she wore when arrested were stained, the policewoman said.
The
state then called Dr. William B. Braunstein, pathologist and blood expert, who
testified the stains on the hatchet and the dark blue clothes Gladys were
“human blood
of the same type.”
Two
high school “pals” who sometimes pondered life’s problems together after
ancient history classes faced each other in the courtroom.
Pretty,
dark-haired Doris French, the “chum” to whose solace blonde Gladys fled last
July when Mrs. MacKnight was killed in her kitchen, was ready to testily in the
trial of her 17-year-old friend and Wightman, known with Gladys as Bayonne high
school’s “perfect couple.”
In
purported “confessions” of the slaying, made to Bayonne police and admitted
yesterday as evidence, Gladys and Donald told how they went to Doris’ house
after the slaying, before starting the automobile ride that ended with their
arrest in Jersey City.
“We
drove to Doris French’s house, … I told her my mother was dead,” one statement
quoted Gladys as saying. Donald was quoted:
“Mrs.
French said, “Take Gladys home and call a doctor.’”
Doris
has been in court since the trial began.
Gladys
and Donald were quoted in the alleged confessions as saying he held Mrs.
MacKnight while Gladys hacked her to death with a hatchet alter a quarrel
because the mother “wouldn’t hurry dinner” so they could play tennis.
[“Cool
Young Woman Is Defendant, The Jury Is Informed - Policewoman Offers Testimony in Case of Girl Charged With Hacking Mother
to Death.” syndicated (AP), May 19, 1937, p. 1]
***
FULL
TEXT (Article 2 of 2): Jersey City. N. J., May 28. – Gladys MacKnight, 17-year-old high school
girl, and her former sweetheart, Donald Wightman, 19, accepted gratefully today
a prison term for the hatchet murder of her mother.
A
jury saved them from the electric chair by returning a verdict of second degree
murder which carries a maximum sentence of 30 years and a minimum of one year.
It was debated only three hours.
The
defendants had accused each other.
Despite
what was considered a favorable verdict, the former principals in puppy love,
were unreconciled. As court attendants led them out of the courtroom, Wightman,
who testified that he had confessed the crime to police “to prove his love” for
Gladys, shouted at her:
“You
made a murderer out of me!”
~
Would Wish “Good Luck” ~
This
is a sharp contrast to the gentle boy who, less than four hours before, after
Prosecutor Daniel T. O’Regan had branded both “brutal killers” and pleaded with
the jury “not to set them free to kill again,” had asked permission to wish
Gladys “good luck.”
The
tomboyish Gladys accepted the verdict with more restraint. The only evidence of
emotion was a single tear that trickled down her cheek. Icily, she had listened
to the state’s excoriation. Edgar MacKnight, Gladys’ father, received the
verdict stoically, but dashed out of the courtroom. Wightman’s parents, who
have attended each session of the ten day trial, were unable to restrain their
emotions. The mother became hysterical and collapsed.
The
jurors said, after their dismissal, that if the defendants had been older, “we
would have given them the chair.”
[“Boy
and Girl Convicted - Age Saves Lives Of Young Killers,” syndicated (UP), The
Circleville Herald (Oh.), May 28, 1937, p. 1]
[Hatchet
image source: “Sweethearts Confess Hacking Girl’s Mother With Hatchet,” The
Star-Journal (Sandusky, Oh.), Aug. 4, 1936, p. 1]
***
NOTE:
This case inspired Helen Tiernan in May 1937 to use a hatchet when she decided
to murder her children.
***
***
***
***
For more Violence by Women cases involving axes and hatchets, see: Give ‘Em the Axe
***
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***
***
For more Violence by Women cases involving axes and hatchets, see: Give ‘Em the Axe
***
[2840-8/18/80]
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I can't find anything on when they got out of prison.
ReplyDeleteGladys died in 2001, that's all I know for sure.
Delete