Rachel Hartley, 1794, accused; wife of Jacob Hartley.
Suspected victims:
Jacob (John, Jr.) Hartley, died Apr. 4, 1774; son of John
and Anna Catherine Hartley.
John Hartley Sr., died.
Betty Hartley, died; daughter of John and Anna Catherine
Hartley.
Christina Hartley, ill, poisoned; daughter of John and Anna
Catherine Hartley.
Anna Catherine Hartley, widow of late John Hartley, accuser.
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Excerpts from court records dating from
1794.
EXCERPT (p. 212-13): To His Excellency Governor Gayoso, the
petition of Anna Catherine Hartley showeth that whereas she understands that
her son’s pretended wife is making applications to Your Exellency for her son’s
property and that she understands that the said Rachel has set forth that her
son made a will and left what property he had to her, for about nine days
before he died, he said that all that he had in the world should go to his
decrepit mother and his soul to God. Her son was not twenty years of age when
he joined himself to her in marriage . . . . . . . [accuses his wife as the
means of shortening her son’s days and those of others.] Had I not applied to a
man on this creek I should have lost two more of my children as this man declared
in his opinion that they were poisoned, and by several other circumstances and
her threatenings, it appeared evident that she poisoned them. Please direct
Col. Bruin to examine this affair, according to evidences and examinations and
transmitting their depositions to Your Excellency. Sig: Anna Catherine Hartley.
23 Sept. 1794.
EXCERPT (p. 213): Catherine Miles was at
the house of her late father, Mr. John Hartley, about nine months before the
death of her brother, Jacob Hartley, and she heard him at that time declare
that he willed property to his mother and his soul to God. Rachel Hartley was
present and laughed heartily. She believed that her brothers, Jacob and John,
and her sister, Betty, were poisoned. When asked what reason she had for so
believing, she answered that she was told so by Mr. Nicholas Sirlott, a
neighbor who was called in to administer some relief to her brother John and
her sister Christina and who didn’t relieve them. Q. What reason had he that
Rachel Hartley was responsible? A. I have reason to believe that she did
administer it because she threatened to take satisfaction on the family.
She said she would have satisfaction if it was seven years afterwards. She
declared to the truth of what Hezekiah Harman deposed of the dead bodies of her
sister and her brother, Jacob. Catherine Miles, signed with a mark. Bayou
Pierre, 8 Oct. 1794. Before P. Bryan Bruin.
[May Wilson McBee, The Natchez
Court Records, 1767-1805, Abstracts of Early Records, 1953, Greenwood,
Mississippi; reprinted, 1979, Baltimore, pp. 212-215.]
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[750-1/10/21]
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