Harry T. Hayward
Harry T. Hayward (c. 1865 - December 12, 1895) was an American socialite, gambler, arsonist, and murderer during the Victorian Era. Due to his ability to manipulate others, the newspapers of the era dubbed Hayward, "The Minneapolis Svengali," "the most cold-blooded murderer that ever walked God's footstool", and, "the most bloodthirsty soul ever to usurp the human frame."[1]
Hayward is best known as the mastermind of one of 19th century America's most infamous crimes—the 1894 murder for hire of dressmaker Catherine "Kitty" Ging.
In the hours before his hanging at Hennepin County Jail in Minneapolis, Hayward gave a detailed interview to his cousin Edward Goodsell and a court reporter. He admitted to numerous arsons, assaults, swindles, and three unsolved murders.
Historian and true crime writer Jack El-Hai has written that, if Hayward's admissions are true, then he predates Dr. H. H. Holmes as America's first documented serial killer.[2]
Early life
Harry T. Hayward was born in Macoupin County, Illinois, the son of William and Lodusky Hayward, and was brought to Minneapolis at the age of one year. When he was about six years old, his family briefly returned to Illinois and stayed for about one year. Following his return to Minneapolis, Hayward "went to a private school conducted by Mrs. Lockwood on Sixth avenue north, and stayed there perhaps six months." Afterwards, he attended the Minneapolis public school system until graduating high school. [3]
According to 19th century psychologist W.A. Jones, Hayward's boyhood, "shows marked characteristics. In early life he was recognized by his school fellows as a bully, brutal in his instincts, enjoying the sufferings of others, and delighting in the torture of domestic animals."[4]
According to Fr. James M. Cleary, a Roman Catholic priest who briefly served as his spiritual director,[5] Hayward, "received no positive religious instruction", beyond being, "taught the difference between right and wrong", and being encouraged, "to do the right and avoid the wrong". However, "no motive was assigned", as to, "why he should shun evil and do good. All was vague and shadowy."[6]
Upon graduating, Hayward became a clerk before beginning to gamble at the age of twenty. Hayward later stated that even before this, "my god was always money."[7]
According to Fr. Cleary, Hayward began, after succumbing to what a later age would call gambling addiction, "to quiet the stings of conscience" by carefully studying Atheist writings. He reportedly avoided writings critical of Atheism, "for he sought what he found in the ridicule of religion, encouragement for his disordered and deceitful life."[8]
Dr. Jones elaborates, "He seemed without a conscience and felt no.more concern in planning or executing a criminal deed in manhood than, when a boy, he deliberately impaled a live cat on the side of a fence. He did not seem to realize the enormity of his acts and the influence they exerted on the community as everything he did builded and strengthened his personal egotism."[9]
Ging murder
In January 1894, Hayward met Katherine "Kitty" Ging, a tenant of his parents at the Ozark Flats building on Hennepin Avenue and Thirteenth Street. He persuaded her to front him large sums of money, which he used gambling. When Ging demanded the return of her money, Hayward paid her with counterfeit currency. Privately, however, he described her as, "an easy mark."
On December 3, 1894, Ging's body was found, shot behind the ear, on a road near Lake Calhoun. It was later revealed that Hayward had persuaded her to purchase a $10,000 life insurance policy which named him as sole beneficiary.
Trial
Harry Hayward's trial for first degree murder began, before Judge Seagrave Smith, on 21 January 1895. Hennepin County Attorney Frank M. Nye appeared for the prosecution.
Hayward's defense team included William Erwin, known as "The Tall Pine Tree of the Northwest",[10] and John Day Smith,[11] a Baptist Deacon, a Republican State Senator, and one of Minnesota's foremost death penalty abolitionists.[12]
The trial lasted, according to Walter Trenerry, a total of 46 days and consisted in the calling of 136 witnesses.[13]
The prosecution's main witnesses were triggerman Claus Blixt and Harry's older brother Adry Hayward. The defense unsuccessfully tried to have Adry Hayward's testimony ruled in-admissable, calling him insane on the subject". In overruling the objection, Judge Smith quipped, "Well, I don't see that he is any more insane at the present time than the attorney is."[14]
After the defense took over, Hayward took the stand himself and denied all allegations.
The case went to the jury on Friday 8 March 1895 at 11:30 AM. At 2:15 PM, the jury returned with the verdict, "We, the jury, find the defendant, Harry T. Hayward, guilty of murder in the first degree."[15]
On 11 March 1895, presiding Judge Smith sentenced Hayward to death by hanging.
Interview
Prior to his execution, Hayward gave a detailed series of interviews to his cousin Edward H. Goodsell. During this conversation, he admitted to numerous acts of illegal gambling, arson and three other murders. Transcripts were taken down by a court stenographer.
His victims included a twenty-year-old "sporting girl" whom he met in Pasadena, California. Hayward claimed to have lured her into a remote location in the Sierra Madre, shot her in the back of the head, and buried her in the woods. Hayward then made off with $7000 which she had carried in her wallet.[16]
Hayward also claimed to have fatally shot a "consumptive" near Long Branch, New Jersey, robbed him of $2000, and disposed of his body in the Shrewsbury River.
According to Harold Schechter, "His most brutal crime, however, was the slaying of a 'Chinaman' in a New York City gambling joint on Mulberry Street. Getting into an altercation over a card game, Harry, 'knocked the Chinaman down and kicked him in the stomach.' He then picked up a chair and jabbed the pointed end of one wooden leg into the man's eye. Then, while he was, 'down and howling," Harry sat down on the chair. 'His skull was kind of thin,' Harry related with a chuckle, 'and I heard the chair leg smash down through his skull.'"[17]
Hayward only admitted his involvement in Ging's murder, however, when it became clear that no reprieve was going to arrive from Minnesota Governor David Marston Clough.
At the end of the interview, Hayward quoted the poem, "Happy the man," by John Dryden, saying that it encompassed his philosophy of life.[18]
According to Harold Schechter, "Throughout the confession, Harry does in fact display many of the traits that we now know are typical of serial murderers: overweening narcissism, juvenile sadism... pyromania, a total lack of empathy for other human beings. Like other serial killers, he would experience his 'murderous impulse' as a kind of autonomous 'second self that would suddenly 'come over him.' Interestingly, he also seems to have suffered from convulsions as an adolescent, possibly as a result of a head injury -- a factor found in the background of many serial killers."[19]
Execution
On the early morning of December 11, 1895, Harry T. Hayward was hanged at Hennepin County Jail.
On the evening of 10 December, he said, about members of the clergy, "I like these men and want to show them respectful consideration, but I do not care for religion. As a general thing, men in this sort of predicament get religious because they think it will brace them for the final ordeal. I do not need it. I am perfectly contented."[20]
At midnight on 11 December, Hayward was visited by John Day Smith, who extracted from him a promise that he would publicly proclaim his faith in Jesus Christ from the scaffold.[21]
Moments later, Hayward was clothed in a black robe and cap and led to the gallows by Hennepin County Sheriff John Holmberg. As he ambled to the scaffold, Hayward cheerfully bade the spectators, "Good evening" a requested three cheers for himself.[22]
Upon being asked if he had any last words, Hayward gave a long and verbose speech and cracked so many jokes about his imminent death that one eyewitness later recalled that the spectators, "looked upon him almost as if he were a stage performer who would soon take his bow, receive his modicum of applause, and retire."[23]
Eventually, Hayward kept his promise to Smith, "He is a religious man and I told him I would pledge him what he asked of me to say. I pledged it to him, although if I honestly believed it, I would say it, and satisfy myself, and it was this: 'Oh, God, for Christ's sake, forgive me for my sins.'"[24]
Hayward also said of his brother Adry, "He has done me no wrong. I have done him a great injustice and wrong, and I have asked for his forgiveness and received it."[25]
Hayward's, "flippant monologue," continued until Sheriff Holmberg cut in and ordered him to, "Die like a man."
Hayward's arms and legs were then pinioned and the noose was thrown around his neck. He sneered and quipped, "Keep up your courage boys!"[26] Harry Hayward's last words were those of a gambler, "Pull her tight; I'll stand pat." The gallows trap swung open at 2:12 AM, but death was not merciful. The rope had been mis-measured and Hayward slowly strangled. He was finally pronounced dead at 2:25 AM 11 December 1895.[27]
Sheriff John Holmberg was paid $250 for his services.[28]
Burial
After being conveyed to the City Morgue, Hayward's body was autopsied. His brain was removed and weighed in at 55 ounces. Measurements were also taken of his skull in accordance with the theories of Italian criminologist and physician Cesare Lombroso, who believed that criminals were a distinctive humanoid type. It was announced that Harry Hayward had possessed a "symmetry of skull, brain and face; the protrusion of the front teeth, and the narrow and arched palate". In conclusion, doctors ruled that Hayward was "a degenerate biological phenomenon somewhat below the savage and above the lunatic."[29]
Following a funeral ceremony at Lakewood Cemetery, [30] Harry T. Hayward was interred in a family plot at the Minneapolis Pioneers and Soldiers Memorial Cemetery.[31]
Serial Killer?
In 2010, Minneapolis-based historian and true crime writer Jack El-Hai again brought the crimes of Harry Hayward to national attention. El-Hai had first learned of Hayward while writing an article for the 100th anniversary of the Kitty Ging murder in 1994. Deeply chilled by Hayward's cold-blooded nature, El-Hai continued his research on the case for decades. When Edward Goodsell's 1896 book about his cousin was digitized and put on Google Books, El-Hai read the transcript of Hayward's last interview for the first time and learned of his admission to 3 other unsolved murders. In a February 2010 article for Minnesota Monthly, El-Hai argued that if Hayward's claims are proved to be true, then his crimes predate those of H.H. Holmes and are contemporary with those of Jack the Ripper. El-Hai expressed hope that Hayward's other alleged victims would rise from obscurity, as no other justice for them is now possible. He argued that, if this ever happened, Harry Hayward would be proven to have been America's first serial killer.[32]
True crime author and historian Harold Schechter has written, "In the end, it is impossible to know whether Harry Hayward killed one victim or (as he claimed) four. All that can be said with certainty is that, as a case of criminal psychopathology - 'moral insanity,' in the terms of his contemporaries - Harry Hayward was, as Goodsell and others saw it, one of the most remarkable specimens of his age."[33]
Conspiracy theory
According to Walter Trenerry, rumors soon spread that Hayward had been secretly resurrected by a secret society. When researching the Ging murder during the early 1960s, Trenerry heard claims that the Freemasons' Grand Lodge of Minnesota had resurrected him. Trenerry, however, expressed skepticism that Hayward could have survived both hanging and dissection.[34]
Ballad
The murder ballad The Fatal Ride describes Hayward's involvement in the Kitty Ging murder.
Further reading
- Bessler, John D., (2003), Legacy of Violence: Lynch Mobs and Executions in Minnesota, University of Minnesota Press.
- Goodsell, Edward H., (1896), "Harry Hayward: Life, crimes, dying confession and execution of the celebrated Minneapolis criminal,", Calhoun Publishing Co., Minneapolis, Minnesota.
- Schechter, Harold, (2012), Psycho USA: Famous American Killers You Never Heard Of, Ballantine Books.
- Trenerry, Walter N. (1962), Murder in Minnesota: A Collection of True Cases, Minnesota Historical Society Press.
External links
- Murder by Gaslight
- "The Killer who Haunts Me." by Jack El-Hai, Minnesota Monthly, February, 2010.
References
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 240.
- ↑ "The Killer who Haunts Me," by Jack El-Hai, Minnesota Monthly, February, 2010.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), pages 33-34.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), page 195.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), pages 131-135.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), pages 207-208.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), page 34.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), page 208.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), page 196.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), page 149.
- ↑ Bessler (2003), page 135.
- ↑ Bessler (2003), pages 117-140.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), page 149.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), pages 149-150.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), page 151.
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 252.
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 252.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), page 112.
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 253.
- ↑ Goodsell (1896), page 135.
- ↑ Bessler (2003), page 137.
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 254.
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 254.
- ↑ Bessler (2003), pages 137-138.
- ↑ Bessler (2003), page 138.
- ↑ Schechter (2012), page 254.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), page 153.
- ↑ Bessler (2003), page 138.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), page 153.
- ↑ Trenerry (2003), pages 153-154.
- ↑ Findagrave's Entry on Harry Hayward
- ↑ Jack El-Hai, The Killer Who Haunts Me, Minnesota Monthly, February 2010.
- ↑ Schechter (2012, page 253.
- ↑ Trenerry (1962), page 154.