FULL TEXT: Montgomery, Ala. – Gov. Gordon Persons today
refused to spare the life of Mrs. Earle C. Dennison, the nurse who poisoned her
infant niece and must die in the electric chair tonight.
In a dramatic announcement to newsmen following a clemency
hearing, Pearsons said. “I will not interfere with the sentence.”
His refusal to intervene means Mrs. Dennison, 55-year-old
former hospital nurse from Wetumpka, Ala., will become the first white woman
ever electrocuted in Alabama.
Mrs. Dennison is scheduled to die shortly after midnight at
Kilby Prison.
The governor said, "I am sorry, of course, to have to be the governor to make
this decision for the first time. The poisoned child is just as dead as if the
crime had boon committed by a man "God bless Mrs. Dennison's soul."
Persons' decision come despite a last-minute plea from the
condemned woman to "have mercy on me. Save my life."
The gaunt, 85-year-old widow, clad in a plain black dress,
sat impassively-throughout most of her clemency hearing before the governor's
legal adviser, William N. McQueen.
But her nerves gave way and tears welled in her eyes as she
whispered her, simple plea.
She is to pay the penalty for the arsenic poisoning of
2-year-old Shirley Diann Weldon, who died in convulsions in a Wetumpka, Ala.
hospital on May 1, 1952.
The state contended she killed the Weldon child to collect
$5,500 from two insurance policies she had on the tot.
She also was charged with killing Weldon child, Polly Ann,
but was never tried for that offense. Arsenic was found in the bodies of both
girls.
Mrs. Dennison, who had been chief operating room nurse at
the Wetumpka, Ala., hospital, was arrested May 8, 1952, seven days after
Shirley Diann died in convulsions at the hospital.
She admitted in two signed statements that she gave arsenic
to the blonde, curly haired child in a soft drink during a visit to the Weldon
home. Mrs. Dennison recalled that Shirley Diann had climbed affectionately into
her lap and hugged her around the neck just before she swallowed the
poison."
While the child lay dying, Mrs. Dennison said, she drove to
the home of an insurance agent and paid an overdue premium on n $500 policy on
the child's life. The aunt was the beneficiary on that policy on the child’s
life. The aunt was the beneficiary on that policy and on another one for $5,000.
Then, when an autopsy was ordered on Shirley Diann’s body,
Mrs. Dennison watched the operation which revealed the arsenic.
[“Baby Poisoner to Die Tonight,” syndicated (AP),
Hattiesburg American (Ms.), Sep. 3, 1953, p. 1]
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