COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL • OCTOBER 10, 2018 • 9A Off beat Oregon: 1895 holiday murder season started early, ended late By Finn J.D. John For The Sentinel R esidents of Linn County probably had a bit of an edgy time over Th anksgiving in 1895. Th e county jail in Al- bany had played host, for the previous month and a half, to not one but two of the most notorious murderers in the history of the state. Linn County’s murder sea- son kicked off in the tiny com- munity of Jordan on Sept. 26, when mild-mannered house- wife Emma Hannah took a hat, fake mustache and glass- es, and a fi ve-shot .32 revolver next door and assassinated a dangerously dishy neighbor, whom she suspected of being overly friendly with her hus- band. Th en, on Nov. 19, 18-year- old Lloyd Montgomery, black- sheep son of the Montgomery family of Brownsville, fl ew into a rage and murdered three people (including his parents) with his old man’s Winchester hunting rifl e. It has to have been a holiday season to remember in Albany and the surrounding areas, as both of these cases came up for trial and sentencing right around Christmastime. Emma Hannah was an or- dinary farm wife, or so she seemed. She’d started late — she was 29 when she married John, her husband, in 1875 — but she’d fi lled their farmhouse with four children over the following two decades. But something seems to have happened in the course of the birth of her last daugh- ter that caused her to be in chronic pain and unable to function, as a wife, the way she felt she should. Th is apparent- ly caused her to feel deeply in- secure about her position vis- à-vis John. Her fears, which deepened to the point of outright pa- ra-noia, centered around Lot- tie Hiatt, a younger woman who’d divorced her fi rst hus- band and now was estranged from her second and living with her mother and three- year-old son a mile or so from the Han-nah house. To Emma Hannah, the fact that Lottie was a divorcée meant she must be a woman of easy virtue, and therefore a threat to her marriage. Jeal- ousy and paranoia simmered quietly inside her until, on the evening of Sept. 19, 1895, she decided she could bear no more. She borrowed her son’s hat and her husband’s overcoat, put on a fake mustache and glasses, pocketed her other son’s fi ve-shot .32 Smith & Wesson, and headed on over to Lottie’s place. When she got there, she knocked on the door. Lottie opened it, and the disguised Emma pushed her way into the kitchen, pulling a leath- er-bound book out of the pocket of the coat. “I was wondering if you would be interested in buying a book?” the visitor said, push- ing it into Lottie’s hands. “I’m sorry, but I’m really not interested,” Lottie replied, handing the book back. Th e stranger’s response was to pull out the .32 and, mutter- ing, “You should have bought the book,” clobber Lottie over the head with it. Lottie, a little stunned but not badly so, turned and ran. Th e stranger fi red aft er her, nicking her neck. Lottie’s mother, Elizabeth Holman, took advantage of the dis- traction to clock the strange “man” across the side of the head with a piece of fi rewood, sending the hat, glasses and mustache fl ying; the stranger turned and smashed the pistol across her face, sending her fl ying to the fl oor, momentari- ly unconscious. Th en Emma chased Lottie down, put the gun to her tem- ple, pulled the trigger, and left the house. No one had gotten a very good look at the killer, but Lottie’s little boy, Lofa, testifi ed that the killer had had long gray hair done up in a bun. Suspicion naturally fell upon Emma, whose enmity for Lottie was well known; and when the sheriff went to ques- tion her, her answers made it clear that although she was denying hav-ing killed Lottie, she was very, very glad she was now dead. During the investigation, it came out that someone in the neighborhood had been leav- ing little notes on Emma’s gate — notes claiming that John had been having an aff air with Lottie and would soon be run- ning away with her. No one ever fi gured out who was leaving them; but who- ever it was probably was just making trouble for the sake of making trouble — if John ever did have an aff air with Lottie, everyone involved was unusu- ally discreet about it, for no evidence of such a thing was ever found. Th e trial started on Nov. 25, and the outcome was never much in doubt. Emma was convicted of second-degree murder and sent to prison, where she was moved back and forth several times be- tween the penitentiary and the insane asylum until her death in 1930. By the time her trial had started, though, an even more heinous murder had pushed her case off the front pages of newspapers statewide: the double-parricide of Lloyd Montgomery. oyal “Lloyd” Montgomery was the oldest son of John and Elizabeth Montgomery, who owned a big prosperous farm near Brownsville. Lloyd was their oldest son, and he had just turned 18; he was a hulking, surly youth, very stubborn and with a bad tem- per. For the previous few years his smaller, frailer father had been afraid to discipline him, and consequently he’d devel- oped an attitude of entitlement and a disinclination to consid- er the feelings of others. He was, in short, something of a bad seed. Th ere isn’t really any way to know for sure what happened on that day, Nov. 19, when Lloyd shot his parents. Lloyd was a very good shot, and he left no survivors. But the most believable of his several con- fessions was that his father had slapped him across the face in the presence of a fam- ily friend, a mill owner named Daniel McKercher, and he had been so furious that he’d gone back in the house, retrieved his father’s Winchester .40-86 express rifl e, and shot his fa- ther through the head with it. McKercher had then fl ed around the side of the house with Lloyd in hot pursuit, try- ing to take cover by dashing in- side. Just as he gained the front steps, Lloyd got a clear shot, and McKercher’s body landed with a crash in the middle of the sitting room fl oor. Th is, of course, greatly alarmed Lloyd’s mother, who ran for the back door scream- ing. Lloyd fi red twice more: once through the mid-dle of his mother’s back, and once in the back of her head. In the stillness that followed, Lloyd’s thoughts naturally turned to the question of how he might avoid being hanged for the crime he had just com- mitted. Laying the rifl e down next to McKercher’s body, he hustled off to the fi eld that his brother Orville was plowing, hoping to establish an alibi. Th is might have worked, L Michili Monroi, LCSW Counseling Services ill out the form below to have your organization's holiday bazaar included in the bazaar listing in the Cottage Grove Sentinel each Wednesday during the holidays. Cost for this service is $45.00 for a 1x3 advertisement, 50 words or less. Please enclose check or money order if mailing in this listing. Call us at 541-942-3325 for more information. Deadline is NOON, Thursday for the following week’s publication. Must be pre-paid to be accepted. ORGANIZATION: DATE OF EVENT: LOCATION: TIME: FEATURED ITEMS OR ATTRACTIONS: S entinel C ottage G rove 116 N. Sixth Street · P.O. Box 35 · Cottage Grove · 541-942-3325 541-255-8822 1450 Birch Ave Cottage Grove, OR 97424 • Individual and Family Counseling • Insurance and Sliding Scale • Accepting New Clients • Weekend and Weekday Appointments Available but he met his younger sister and brothers on the way. Th e youngest boy asked him if he knew what all the shooting had been, and he claimed — in front of four witnesses — that he hadn’t heard a thing. Lloyd then followed the oth- er kids back to the house, and when the youngest came out hollering that there was a dead body in the sitting room, Lloyd leaped on McKercher’s horse, raced to an uncle’s house, and reported breathlessly that someone had murdered his parents and McKercher. Suspicious eyes were on Lloyd immediately, and he was promptly arrested. He had lots to say about the murders over the following few months, but he never was able to explain how he’d known his parents were dead when the only body he supposedly knew was in the house was McKercher’s. Also, his reputation as a bad seed didn’t help his cause much ei-ther. “Be sure and have a strong guard over him,” his grandmother told the ar- resting offi cers, “or he will be back and murder a lot more of the family.” Probably the most interest- ing thing about Lloyd’s case was his behavior in prison, and the public reaction to it. He fi rst claimed McKercher had murdered his parents and he’d killed McKercher in self-de- fense — a claim that nearly got him lynched, as he’d seriously misjudged McKercher’s popu- larity in the community. Th en he confessed, retract- ed his confession, reconfessed, and told story aft er story. When some of his old child- hood pals were arrested and put in the cell next to him he had a high old time with them, and seemed to have not a care in the world. Meanwhile, of course, he had been convicted and sen- tenced to hang. Each time his story was in the paper, a pic- ture of his strong, boyishly handsome face appeared, and his “fan club” grew. Governor William Lord was deluged with pleas from wom- en around the state begging him to pardon the young rake. Lord, though a kind-heart- ed fellow, didn’t bite, and just before Candlemas — on Jan. 31, 1896 — Lloyd was hanged for the murder of his parents. By then, of course, the 1895 holiday season had been over for several weeks. But (with apologies to Dol- ly Parton and Kenny Rog- ers) Lloyd Montgomery and Emma Hannah had certainly made this a Christmas to re- member for Linn County.