Ost of the following is true, M or founded on truth. A few are waits - products of my imagination; little stories that came into my mind from time to time. Some of them are from letters written home while I was confined in the Tombs Prison in New York City, and in the death-chamber at Sing Sing.
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Roland Burnham Molineux (1866–1917) was a paint-factory chemist and social climber from Brooklyn. He was arrested for having sent a bottle of poisoned Bromo‐Seltzer to the manager of the Knickerbocker Athletic Club after an argument. The manager's cousin, Katherine J. Adams, took some and died. He was charged with murder in the first degree for having caused her death by poisoning. The proceedings lasted from November 1899 to February 1900, making the People v. Molineux the longest and one of the most expensive trials in New York history to that date. After two mistrials Molineux was found guilty, but the verdict was appealed, and he was acquitted in a retrial after three years in prison. He then wrote books as well as a play. Tensions related to the production of the play apparently proved too much for the author, for shortly after the play closed he was committed to an insane asylum where he died four years later.
This was an unexpected surprise, I came across the cover at gutenberg.org, and started reading the book.
Molineux spent several years on death row in the early 1900s before he was aquitted, and his tales and impressions are well written, intelligent and quite eerie. If half of what he writes about the NY District attorney and the press is true, that's scary business!
An odd and interesting little book that combines the author's personal philosophy, black humor, and descriptions of the death house conditions. Both the main text and the afterward by a journalist assume the reader's familiarity with Molineux's murder trials, so there are a lot of questions that aren't answered. The Wikipedia entry fills in those gaps, and reveals why the book is of real historical interest.
Fun read about a man's experiences on death row during the turn of the 20th century New York. Familiarity with what brought the author to death row would help, but fine as a standalone. I actually had some familiarity with the case as I had read a blog about it before reading this, and as I write this review I'm currently midway through Harold Schechter's excellent long-form treatment of the Molineux Poisoning affair, 'The Devil's Gentleman'.
Some interesting things to note
- The author just does not talk much of anything about his past and what brought him to death row, although there are references to poison(his fellow prisoners gifting him Bromo-Seltzer in jest)
- The author (I think rightly) rails against handwriting experts (of the time at least) owing to their dubious qualifications and lack of standardized training
- While completely lambasting trial by media (what he called the "fourth degree" or investigation), he seems to support the use of torture (the "third degree") while being completely aware of its brutal limits
- For a man widely seen as a pompous snob before his imprisonment he seemed to have bonded well and found camaraderie with his fellow condemned, most of whom were working class, some poor immigrants barely able to speak english, and was able to both make the best of his situation, and mourn the latest taken to the "Little Door" with respect
The author would eventually be acquitted and released in his retrial
after finishing Schechter's book I shall try to find and read the play "The Man Inside", also by this book's author and also relating to his prison experience, which was written while he was suffering from the late-stage syphillis which would eventually drive him insane and dead in 1917.
It's a collection of real stories happened behind the bar in US. The author was a death row inmate before his acquittal made him a free man to tell the tale.
Honestly didn't appealed to me. Not because stories told was not interesting. But more to the colloquial way it penned up that made me hard to absorb and feel it. Not my cup of tea. Yet it may sits well with the American as it was written in their slang. So they will have better comprehension than me in understanding it..