INTRODUCTION
1 My research began with the following works, all of which pointed me in different directions. Their approaches influenced my own, whether I agreed or disagreed, and I’m grateful to Lisa J. Lindquist, who wrote the article “Images of Alice: Gender, Deviancy, and a Love Murder in Memphis,” Journal of History of Sexuality, no. 1 (Winter, 1995): 30-61; Lillian Faderman briefly discussed the case in Surpassing the Love of Men: Romantic Friendships and Love Between Women from the Renaissance to the Present (New York: Harper Paperbacks, 1988); Lisa Duggan, Sapphic Slashers: Sex, Violence, and American Modernity (Durham: Duke University Press, 2001); Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History (New York: Plume, 1992)
CHAPTER 1: I DON’T CARE IF I’M HUNG!
2 As I mentioned in the introduction, I looked for agreement among multiple newspaper articles, eyewitness accounts, and courtroom documents, and then chose to quote and add description where I found agreement or obvious disagreement with what was being quoted versus described. The same articles from 1892 (and a few from the years that followed), and the hypothetical case, were mined for information that was then distributed throughout the book.
3 These events, and all that follow, have been reconstructed from newspaper articles and testimony.
CHAPTER 2: THE GREAT DRAMA
4 Lillian Faderman, Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers: A History of Lesbian Life in Twentieth-Century America (New York: Columbia University Press, 1991).
5 Of course, I am not suggesting that marriage would have fixed their issues. On the contrary, I point to their ongoing issues of jealousy and infidelity throughout the book. I am simply suggesting that the only narrative that Alice might have found solace in was one in which she and Freda made a home together, but I suspect the reality would have proven difficult, to say the least. Vincent Astor, the local historian I mention in the Introduction, said to me, “I fear what would have happened if they made it to St. Louis.” I, too, have often wondered how these two sheltered young women would have fared out in the world, far from their families and unable to contact them. Would Freda’s infidelity have disappeared, as promised, with marriage? Would Alice’s jealousy subside, regardless of whether or not Freda’s behavior changed? What would have happened if Alice failed to make a convincing Alvin J. Ward? How would they have supported themselves? What if Alvin disappointed Freda? Would she have called her family or sought help? Was Alice’s violence inevitable? What if their families found them in St. Louis? These are just some of the questions that come to mind—and they enter my mind quite often.
6 The Higbee School for Young Ladies. Annual Catalog. Memphis and Shelby County Room, Memphis Public Library.
7 Barbara Welter, “The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860.” American Quarterly 18, no. 2, part 1, (Summer, 1966): pp. 141-74.
8 Robert A. Sigafoos, Cotton Row to Beale Street: A Business History of Memphis (Memphis: Memphis State University Press, 1979), 78.
CHAPTER 3: MR. AND MRS. ALVIN J. WARD
9 “Still in Doubt,” Memphis Commercial, July 20, 1892.
10 Small changes have been made to glaring errors in reprints of the letters throughout the book, but otherwise spelling errors and inconsistencies have been left in. The letters that appear throughout the book were quoted and reprinted in the articles “Still in Doubt,” July 20, 1892, 1; “Silly Letters,” July 21, 1892; “None But Freda,” July 22, 1892; “Myra Is a Myth,” July 23, 1892; Memphis Commercial, and “Letters in Demand,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 16, 1892.
CHAPTER 5: I THOUGHT YOU WERE A LADY
11 Cornelia Ward, Freda’s mother, was also buried in an unmarked grave in Elmwood in 1882.
12 Page 7 of Chapter 14: The Hypothetical Case.
13 For more on Gantt and Wright’s role as community leaders after the yellow fever outbreaks, see J.P. Young, The Standard History of Memphis, Tennessee (Knoxville: H.W. Crew, 1912). For more on Alice’s lawyers, see Paul Coppock’s Memphis Memoirs (Memphis: Memphis State University Press, 1980). There was another lawyer at the defense table, Pat Winters, but he served only as an advisor and did not speak.
14 Isabella Mitchell’s hospitalizations will be discussed at greater length in Chapter 14: The Hypothetical Case.
15 For more about Memphis’s newspaper publishing industry, see Paul Coppock, Memphis Sketches (Memphis: Friends of Memphis and Shelby County Libraries, 1976). The Commercial and the Appeal Avalanche have merged and are still in circulation under the combined name Commercial Appeal.
16 My understanding of the role of print capitalism was influenced by Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 1983); John D. Stevens, Sensationalism and the New York Press (New York: Columbia University, 1991); Michael Schudson, Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers (New York: Basic Books, 1981); and Judith R. Walkowitz, City of Dreadful Delight: Narratives of Sexual Danger in Late Victorian London (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992).
17 Paul Coppock, Memphis Sketches (Memphis: Friends of Memphis and Shelby County Libraries, 1976), 130-132. Circulation figures appeared on the newspapers in the R.L. Polk & Co’s Memphis Directory (1892) and Memphis Directory, vol. 30 (1892).
18 There would be a Lizzie whose case would be a cause célèbre that same year, but it would be in August, when Lizzie Andrew Borden was tried for the murders of her father, Andrew Jackson Borden, and stepmother, Abby Durfee Gray Borden, in Fall River, Massachusetts. She would later be acquitted. For more on her trial, see Ann Jones, Women Who Kill (New York: The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2009)
19 If Freda had indeed been “almost beheaded,” it is hard to imagine she would have been able to take off running while Jo attempted to distract Alice, even momentarily, by calling her a “dirty dog.”
20 “A Very Unnatural Crime,” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 26, 1892.
21 “Miss Alice Mitchell’s Lunacy,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 27, 1892, 5.
22 It is entirely possible that George Mitchell had influenced his neighbor’s narrative.
23 “I Loved Her So!” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 26, 1892.
24 “Made Love Like a Man, Alice Mitchell’s Unseemly Conduct with a Girl in Cincinnati,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 22, 1892, 5.
25 Artistic emphasis is added here, and did not appear in the historic printing.
26 The unnamed physician’s identity was revealed to be E. P. Sale, who would later testify in Alice’s lunacy inquisition.
27 Daniel Hack Tuke, ed. A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine, 2 vols. (Philadelphia: P. Blakiston’s Son & Co., 1892), vol. 1, 460.
28 Neil McKenna, The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde (New York: Basic Books, 2009).
29 “Miss Alice Mitchell’s Lunacy, Counsel Have Confidence That Erotomania Can Be Established, The Perverted Affection of One Girl For Another,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 4, 1892, 4.
30 “The Case in Court,” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 29, 1892, 2.
31 “A Most Shocking Crime,” New York Times, Jan. 26, 1892, 1.
32 “Evidence!” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 23, 1892, 1.
33 “Two Girls in Jail,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 27, 1892, 5.
CHAPTER 8: MAIDEN PURITY
34 “Miss Johnston Under Arrest” Milwaukee Sentinel, Jan. 27, 1892.
35 “After tragedy…Did Allie Intend to Mar Miss Ward’s Beauty?” Memphis Commercial, Jan. 27, 1892, 1. “The Recent Horror,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 28, 1892, 5. “Murder’s Aftermath,” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 28, 1892, 2. “Who Is This Jessie James?” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 29, 1892.
36 “Strange Story,” The Atchison Champion. Jan. 29, 1892.
37 There were 5,177 arrests in Memphis in 1892. As readers will no doubt suspect, poor citizens in Memphis were arrested far more often than those of more comfortable means. Disorderly conduct, drunkenness, and vagrancy accounted for 1,887 of those arrests, and from there, the numbers for small crimes like gambling and using profane language are minimal. Memphis would later be known as the “Murder Capital of the World,” but in 1892 there were minimal arrests for violent crime. Only fifteen arrests were made for murder, but as Chapter 13 suggests, that number is clearly too low. Only 817 women were arrested in 1892, of whom 77 percent were African Americans. Memphis Board of Commissioners, “Report of the Chief of Police,” (1892), 202-5.
38 “Bernhardt Jailed,” Memphis Public Ledger, Feb. 17, 1892, 2. “The Case in Court,” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 29, 1892, 2. “The Grand Jury Has the Case,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 30, 1892, 5. “Both Are Arraigned” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 2, 1892.
39 “At Rest in Elmwood,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan 29, 1892.
40 “Murder’s Aftermath,” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 28, 1892.
41 “At Rest in Elmwood, Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 29, 1892.
CHAPTER 9: DELICATE HANDS, HORRIBLE DEED
42 Alice’s plea was supposed to be representative of her present mental state—not her mental state at the time of the murder. However, the murder was indication of “prior insane” conduct, as was the behavior Gantt and Wright compiled in “The Hypothetical Case,” which is discussed at length in Chapter 14. The defense would also have to prove that Alice had a physical malformation or disease of some kind and show how it enervated her mental state. Hereditary insanity would be also be established.
43 “Both Are Arraigned,” Memphis Commercial, Feb, 2, 1892.
44 “Will Be Disappointed, An Expectant Throng Will Gather at the Court House Today,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 17, 1892.
45 “Letters in Demand,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 16, 1892. For more information on “femness,” see Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline D. Davis’s Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community (New York: Routledge, 1993).
46 “Two Girls in Jail,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 27, 1892.
47 “I Loved Her So!” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 26, 1892.
48 “Alice Mitchell’s Crime,” New York World, Jan. 31, 1892. “The Recent Horror,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 28, 1892.
49 Isabella Mitchell’s husband, stepson, and children would testify at the lunacy inquisition. She was the only immediate family member who did not testify. Neither the defense nor the prosecution called her to the stand.
50 “Two Girls in Jail,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 27, 1892, 5. “The Case in Court,” Memphis Public Ledger, Jan. 29, 1892, 2.
51 “More Room for Judge DuBose,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, February 11, 1892, 4.
52 Lynette Boney Wrenn, Crisis and Commission Government in Memphis: Elite Rule in a Gilded Age City (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1998), 138-39.
53 Like Alice and Freda, Judge DuBose is also buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis—in an unmarked grave.
54 “Will Be Disappointed, An Expectant Throng Will Gather at the Court House Today,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 17, 1892, 2. For more information on racial politics and manhood, see Laura F. Edwards, Gendered Strife and Confusion: The Political Culture of Reconstruction (Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 1997).
55 Case name: United States v. Stanley; United States v. Ryan; United States v. Nichols; United States v. Singleton; Robinson et ux. v. Memphis & Charleston R.R. Co. Racial discrimination in jury selection remains a major issue in America to this day.
56 “Will Be Disappointed, An Expectant Throng Will Gather at the Court House To-Day,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 17, 1892.
57 “The Mitchell Case,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Jan. 28, 1892, 4.
58 Of course, Native Americans had been challenging this narrative since Christopher Columbus “discovered” America.
CHAPTER 10: ATTENDANCE EVEN
GREATER THAN OPENING DAY
59 This scene has been reconstructed based on testimony, “The Hypothetical Case,” and newspaper articles in which more than three corroborated phrases or scenes.
60 For more on women as spectators, see Ann Jones, Women Who Kill (New York, The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2009).
61 The first Civil Rights Act of 1875—also known as the Enforcement Act—was intended to guarantee African Americans equal treatment, but it was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1883. In the first half of the 20th Century, Jim Crow laws, increased lynching, and limited opportunities led to the Great Migration: Six million African Americans left the south for the Northeast, the Midwest, and the West—usually sticking to urban areas. For more information on this subject, see Edward Ayers, The Promise of the New South: Life after Reconstruction (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007).
62 I rely on theatrical terms, and my understanding of public spectatorship was informed by Oskar Negt and Alexander Klug, Public Sphere and Experience: Toward an Analysis of the Bourgeois and Proletarian Public Sphere, trans. Peter Labany, Jamie Owen Daniel, and Assenka Oksiloff (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993).
63 “Second Day!” Memphis Public Ledger, Feb. 24, 1892, 1.
64 “The Pity of It,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 26, 1892, 4. “The Criminal Court Goes On,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 27, 1892, 5.
CHAPTER 11: QUITE A FLIRT
65 “Miss Mitchell’s Trial,” New York Times, Feb, 22, 1892. The defense was not alone in their desire to see the letters. Though one would think that jokes about murder were inappropriate in the aftermath of a teenage girl’s slaying, there were plenty of jokes made on the pages of local papers about discovering Peters’s mangled body in the basement of the Press Club, killed by frustrated reporters.
66 “A Crime of Passion? The Day the Doctor Shot the General,” The Nashville Tennessean Magazine, July 14, 1963, 8-9.
67 He was born Hamilton Rice Patterson in 1861, but five years later, his name was changed to Malcom; he continued to be called “Ham.” He was admitted to the bar in 1883, and would serve as attorney general for Shelby County from 1894 to 1900. He moved on to the United States House of Representatives in his father’s former district (the tenth), from 1901 to 1906, before challenging his party’s nomination for governor in 1906. He criticized his republican opponent, Henry Clay Evans, for supporting the Lodge Bill, which sought to protect the rights of black voters. During his tenure, he banned gambling on horse racing, enacted food and drug regulations, and signed the General Education Act (which established four colleges, including the University of Memphis), but his career ended in scandal. Edward W. Carmack, who had lost the nomination to Patterson in 1908, mocked Patterson’s advisor, Colonel Duncan Cooper. Cooper and his son, Robin, ran into Carmack shortly thereafter on the street, and a shootout ensued. Robin was injured and Carmack died, but both Coopers (even though it was only Robin who engaged in the gunfight) were tried for murder. The public was enraged when Patterson pardoned his advisor; he had made 1,400 pardons during his time in office, and was accused of abusing his powers to aid his political allies. He later joined the Anti-Saloon League and supported Prohibition. By 1921, he was writing a column for the Memphis Herald Courier, and by 1923 he was appointed a judge in Shelby Court. A biographical sketch of his career can be found in the Malcom Rice Patterson Papers, Tennessee State Library and Archives. “Evidence!” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 23, 1892, 1.
68 Flirting on trains was an unenforceable concern for the men who sought to regulate it. In 1897, Representative Prichard B. Hoot introduced a bill to regulate flirting on trains in Missouri, but it was unsuccessful. That same year, Senator James G. McCune recommended Virginia make flirting a misdemeanor.
69 “Present Insanity,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 2, 1892, 5.
70 “Unfolded,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 24, 1892, 1.
73 “Fair Lillie,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 25, 1892, 3. “Fair Lillie,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 25, 1892, 3.
75 “Second Day!” Memphis Public Ledger, Feb. 24, 189, 1.
76 “Fair Lillie,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 25, 1892, 1.
77 Lillie Is at Home,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 28, 1892, 5.
78 “She Is Out on Bail,” Memphis Commercial, Feb. 28. 1892.
CHAPTER 13: THE OLD THREAD-BARE LIE
79 “The Great Actress Wanted to See Miss Alice Mitchell,” the Memphis Appeal Avalanche exclaimed, but even Sarah Bernhardt could not breach the defense’s strict policy of denying access. The French actress, who was arguably the most famous of her time, had been performing in Memphis during the case. To learn of the crime, she needed only descend the theater steps, but she likely encountered news of the same-sex murder alongside reviews of her own performances in La Tosca, Fedora, or Jeanne d’Arc. She and Alice shared more than just space on those pages. In “the sensational” opera, La Tosca, Bernhard played “a love sick” Floria, a celebrated opera singer who commits murder, and then kills herself.
But Bernhardt’s failed attempt to see Alice was no social call. The theatrical nature of the same-sex love murder appealed to her, and she had reportedly compiled clippings related to the case in a scrapbook. She wished to collaborate with French dramatist Victorien Sardou to turn the tragedy of Alice and Freda into an opera. The Appeal Avalanche made much ado of the rumored opera, imagining it “will not be wanting in thrilling situations and sensational development.” The newspaper offered its own artistic interpretations of the theatrical show and, most importantly, speculated over which role the great Belle Époque actress should play. Editorialists thought Freda’s part too brief, and Alice’s too violent, but Lillie Johnson, the case’s swooning, innocent darling, seemed like just the right role.
Nothing ever came of Bernhard’s visit, but if Alice had actually been asked if she would like to receive the actress, she may have done so to honor Freda’s memory. In happier times, the doomed couple had gone to the Grand Opera House and various theaters together—that is, the respectable ones with audiences free of mixed classes and races. They probably went unescorted, which had become increasingly acceptable at the time, offering Alice and Freda a tiny taste of freedom and independence. It gave each girl, in her own way, a means to imagine a world other than the one she knew. “Bernhard in the Jail….The Great Actress Wanted to See Alice Mitchell,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, Feb. 17, 1892.
80 Blaine T. Browne and Robert C. Cottrell, Lives and Times: Individuals and Issues in American History: Since 1865 (Lanham, Maryland, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2009).
81 Ida B. Wells, Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).
82 I found Stewart Emory Tolnay’s A Festival of Violence: An Analysis of Southern Lynchings, 1882-1930 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1995) to be an excellent resource, as well as Lynching and Spectacle: Witness Racial Violence in America, 1890-1940 (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2011). For more on Wells, see Martha Hodes, White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-Century South (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997).
83 Ida B. Wells, Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography of Ida B. Wells.
84 For a thorough examination of the concurrent, but racially segregated lives of Alice Mitchell and Ida B. Wells, see Lisa Duggan’s Sapphic Slashers.
85 Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases (New York: The New York Age, 1892).
86 Attorney General Peters, the Wards, and the Volkmars wanted Alice tried for murder, but the hanging of a white woman was a very different story.
87 In Sapphic Slashers, an academic book, Duggan presents the Mitchell-Ward case alongside the simultaneous lynching narrative.
88 In Sapphic Slashers, historian Lisa Duggan thoroughly explores these points. In the 1890s, the United States was cementing its national identity, and it was predicated upon maintaining the white home on a national level. Same-sex love and African American men and women were cogent threats to the rigid hierarchy of race and gender, and the reactions on a local level from the judge, jail, sheriff, and newspapers speak to the national construction of American modernity. For more information on American modernity, see Peter Taylor, Modernities: A Geohistorical Interpretation (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999).
CHAPTER 14: THE HYPOTHETICAL CASE
89 F. L. Sim, “Alice Mitchell Adjudged Insane,” Memphis Medical Monthly (August 1892).
90 The Hypothetical Case was inspired by the long reports that medical journals had been running for decades. Medical experts would receive these reports and study them in advance of a court case. They would then testify to the diagnoses offered. If the prosecution had found any medical experts, they would have likely provided their own hypothetical case.
91 Charles Rosenberg, The Trial of the Assassin Guiteau: Psychiatry and Law in the Gilded Age (Chicago: University of Chicago, 1968).
92 “Not a Murder,” Memphis Commercial, July 31, 1892, 4.
93 According to The Hypothetical Case, Dr. Comstock, and others who weighed in. As I suggest throughout the text, I do not presume this evidence can be taken as fact. Postpartum depression, which accounts for many of Isabella’s symptoms, is by no means an uncontested diagnosis today. Some experts find it to be somatic, while others maintain it is a psychological disorder.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s short story, “The Wallpaper,” was published in January, 1892—the same month that Alice murdered Freda. The story speaks, however, to Alice’s mother, Isabella. It is a first-person collection of journal entries written by Jane, who has been confined to the upstairs bedroom of a house rented by her husband John, a physician. Jane has just given birth, and John believes she needs the “rest cure” and locks her in the nursery. There is a gate at the top of the stairs, and John, who leaves for work every day, controls Jane’s access to the rest of the house. The nursery’s windows are barred; her confinement is much like being institutionalized. Jane has been diagnosed with “temporary nervous depression—a slight hysterical tendency,” and her mental health devolves as her confinement goes on and she is deprived of stimulation—just like Isabella’s supposed stages accelerated, from puerperal insanity to recovery, in the hospital.
94 Melancholia could have meant many things in 1892. Isabella might have seemed sad or depressed, but as a new mother, she may have just been tired. Carroll Smith-Rosenberg’s Disorderly Conduct: Visions of Gender in Victorian American (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986).
95 “Sane or Insane?” Memphis Commercial, July 19, 1892, 1.
96 The Hypothetical Case states Isabella Mitchell gave birth seven times, but only four adult children were on record, and that same number are buried in the family plot at Elmwood. Only one deceased child (the first one) is mentioned.
97 Judith Walzer Leavitt, Women and Health in America: Historical Readings (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1999).
CHAPTER 15: VICARIOUS MENSTRUATION
98 Thomas Maeder, Crime and Madness: The Origins and Evolution of the Insanity Defense (New York: Harper and Row, 1985), 114.
99 “Still in Doubt,” Memphis Commercial, July 20, 1892, 1. “None but Freda,” July 22, “Myra Is a Myth,” July 23, Memphis Commercial, 1892.
100 Vicarious menstruation is bleeding from a surface other than the mucous membrane of the uterine cavity. It occurs around the time when “normal” menstruation should take place, hence the emphasis on the onset “around the time [Alice’s] womanhood was established.”
101 “Silly Letters,” July 21, 1 and “Not Love at All,” July 24, Memphis Commercial, 1892.
102 “None but Freda,” Memphis Commercial, July 22, 1892, 1.
103 “An Analysis of Love,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 24, 1892.
104 Ruth Harris, “Melodrama, Hysteria and Feminine Crimes of Passion in the Fin-de-Siècle.” History Workshop 25 (Spring 1988).
105 “Alice Mitchell Laughs,” New York World, July 20, 1892, 1.
106 “None but Freda,” Memphis Commercial, July 22, 1892. “Is This Murdered Girl Insane,” New York World, July 1892.
CHAPTER 16: AN IMPOSSIBLE IDEA
107 “Not Love at All,” July 24, “More Evidence,” July 26, and “They All Agree,” July 27, Memphis Commercial, 1892. “An Analysis of Love,” July 24, “Diagnosis of Insanity,” July 26, “The Deed of a Maniac,” July 27, Memphis Appeal Avalanche, 1892. F.L. Sim, “Alice Mitchell Adjudged Insane,” Memphis Medical Monthly (August 1892), 377-429.
108 Dr. Callender was best known for testifying in the case of Charles Guiteau, who was on trial for the assassination of President Garfield in 1881.
109 “The Deed of a Manic,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 27, 1892. “More Evidence,” Memphis Commercial, July 26, 1892.
110 F. L. Sim, “Alice Mitchell Adjudged Insane,” Memphis Medical Monthly (August 1892).
112 See Janet Ann Tighe, “A Question of Responsibility: The Development of American Forensic Psychiatry, 1838-1930.” (Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1983).
113 “The Deed of a Maniac,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 27, 1892.
115 “More Evidence,” Memphis Commercial, July 26, 1892.
116 F. L. Sim, “Alice Mitchell Adjudged Insane.”
118 “The Deed of a Maniac,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 27, 1892.
119 “Her Own Best Witness,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 28, 1892.
CHAPTER 17: HER OWN BEST WITNESS
120 Their attention to her features was just another thing to speculate about, but they may have been influenced by pseudoscience, such as physiognomy or phrenology. Physiognomy was the practice of assessing a person’s personality traits from his or her outward appearance. Phrenology was focused on the human skull; the brain was considered the organ of the mind, thus certain areas have localized and specific functions. In order to determine an individual’s psychological attributes, the skull must be felt and observed.
121 “Her Own Story,” Memphis Commercial, July 28, 1892.
122 “Now a Murder,” Memphis Commercial, July 31, 1892.
123 “The Mitchell Case,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 31, 1892.
124 “Her Own Best Winess,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 28, 1892.
125 “The Last of Alice Mitchell,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 31, 1892. “Not a Murder,” Memphis Commercial, July 31, 1892, and “Alice Mitchell Is Crazy,” New York World, July 31, 1892. “The Mitchell Case,” Memphis Appeal Avalanche, July 31, 1892.
126 Alice had been somewhat inconsistent with the defense, but had ultimately helped Gantt and Wright achieve their aim. Her testimony made her lack of interest in young men abundantly clear. It also made clear her overwhelming love for another woman, so great she had intended to live out the rest of her life in costume, just so they could be together. Dr. Sim, one of the medical experts, would later write that she returned to the defense table with “an expression of satisfaction,” but given that her last moments on the stand were spent describing her longstanding desire to die and a blood-soaked thumbstall, that seems like a dubious observation. Alice’s testimony had satisfied the jury. It was the jury who made it known that they were prepared to deliberate immediately. Dr. Sim wrote they returned within moments, but most newspapers time it at twenty minutes.
CHAPTER 18: THAT STORY WAS NEVER PRINTED
127 Report of the Board of Trustees of the Western Hospital for the Insane, 1890/92, 1892/1894, 1896/98.
128 “Alice Mitchell is Insane,” Bolivar Bulletin, Aug. 5, 1892. Patients who had entered an asylum by way of homicide charge were rarely discharged. For more information, see Thomas Mader, Crime and Madness: The Origins and Evolution of the Insanity Defense (New York: Harper and Row, 1985).
129 If Alice had wanted to set the record straight without her father’s intervention, she had but a few years to do so. George Mitchell died in 1896, and was buried in the family plot at Elmwood Cemetery. Two years later Alice joined him, followed by Isabella in 1917. If Gantt and Wright’s legal fees took a toll on the Mitchell family, their headstones did not indicate it as they were carved in the ornate fashion of the day, but by the time Addie and Mattie joined in the late 1940s, the Great Depression may have taken its toll. Their graves are plain, lacking the roses that adorn Alice’s headstone. It is worth noting the elder Mitchell sisters appeared unmarried, perhaps a realization of the fear that their family’s supposed matrilineal insanity would taint their own prospects.
130 Edward H. Tayor, “Alice Mitchell,” as excerpted in the Bolivar Bulletin, March 10, 1893. Also, see the hypothetical case in the appendix.
131 Sherre Dryden, “That Strange Girl: The Alice Mitchell Murder Case,” DARE I (July 29-July 5, 1988): 4.
132 The patient rolls were numbered, with the first being the healthiest. She appeared on the last roster in July of 1897, though she was back up to the middle roster in January of the following year. Tennessee State Library and Archives: Department of Mental Health Record Group no. 94, Series no. 7: Lists/Rolls of Employees, Inmates, Patients, Pupils and Veterans, box no. 3, folders 1-10.
133 “Alice Mitchell Dead,” Memphis Commercial Appeal, Apr. 1, 1898.
134 1896/1898 Biennial Report of the Western State Insane Asylum.
135 Paul Coppock, “Memphis’ Strangest Love Murder Had All-Girl Cast,” Memphis Commercial, Sept. 7, 1930.
EPILOGUE: SEXUAL MONSTERS
136 These two quotes come from Psychopathia Sexualis p. 428, 430. The first edition, published in 1886, listed four “cerebral neuroses,” including parethesia, which Krafft-Ebbing defined as “misdirected sexual desire.” Under that heading, he placed fetishism, masochism, sadism, transsexualism, and homosexuality.
137 R. E. Daniel, “Castration of Sexual Perverts,” Texas Medical Journal 9, no. 6 (Dec. 1893): 255-71, quoted from page 263.
138 R. French Stone. Biography of Eminent American Physicians and Surgeons (Indianapolis: Carlson and Hollenbeck, 1894), 234-237.
139 Hughes also made quite a few mistakes in his editorial. He misunderstood Alice’s plea as “not guilty” by reasons of insanity, when Gantt and Wright sought that she be declared unfit to stand trial. He also confused Krafft-Ebbing’s definitions of sexual perversion with other sexologists’ definitions, and continued to do so in subsequent articles on the case, introducing biblical and evolutional frameworks.
140 Charles H. Hughes, “Alice Mitchell, the ‘Sexual Pervert’ and Her Crime,” Alienist and Neurologist 13, no. 3 (July 1892): 554-57.
141 Editorial by “H.” from the Medical Fortnightly, excerpted in the Alienist and Neurologist 13, no. 2 (Apr. 1892). The article certainly left an impression on Hughes, who not only repurposed it, but was still wondering, a year later, how much “mutual masturbation” had occurred between Alice and Freda, and how much it influenced their relationship’s violent end. See Charles H. Hughes, “Erotopathia—Morbid Eroticism,” Alienist and Neurologist 14, no. 4 (October 1893), pg. 535.
142 James G. Kiernan, “Sexology: Increase of American Inversion,” Urologic and Coetaneous Review (1916).
143 In the 1970s, Alice Mitchell’s story was finally recast. After the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion, civil rights, women’s liberation, and second wave feminism, the past was mined for lesbians, and Alice, who had so clearly informed modern conceptions of female same-sex love, became an important person within this history. She remained a murderer, but one who had been fundamentally misunderstood during her lifetime, and for almost a hundred years after. Jonathan Ned Katz included the case in his groundbreaking Gay American History in 1976, which finally cast a critical eye on the original newspaper articles and publications, including Dr. Frank Sim’s own Memphis Medical Monthly. In Tennessee, Fred Harris’s 1975 essay, “Lesbian Slaying Shocked ‘Gay Nineties’ Memphians” appeared in the collection Gaiety…Reflecting Gay Life in the South, and Sherre Dryden’s “That Strange Girl: The Alice Mitchell Murder Case” was published in DARE in 1988, Nashville’s lesbian and gay newspaper. That same year, “Alice and Fred,” a play by Dan Ellentuck, ran in New York City’s oldest theater, the Cherry Lane, though the playwright moved the tragedy from Memphis to Albany, and seemed to amplify her interest in baseball.
144 Richard von Krafft-Ebbing described female inversion as “the masculine soul, heaving in the female bosom.”
145 Ellis was influenced by his wife, Edith Lees. When they married, he was a 32-year-old virgin, and she openly preferred women. Ellis recounted her case in Sexual Inversion, as well as five first-person narratives she found on his behalf. None of those accounts contained the same-sex love as violence plot favored by American newspapers, or even cases in asylums. Lees had not found these women on the pages of newspapers or in articles written by doctors in asylums, but out in the world, and they were women the Ellis’ were likely to socialize with; all of the women, like Alice Mitchell, enjoyed at least a middle class existence. Ellis’s analysis, however, was a mix of naturalizing and negative, an attempt at carving out a space without threatening the traditional home or domestic roles within it. He reinforced the idea that there was some masculinity to be found in the female invert, which made her easier to identify than her feminine counterpart, but this was easier to maintain in theory than practice.
On the whole, they are women who are not very robust and well developed, physically or nervously, and who are not well adapted for child-bearing, but who still possess many excellent qualities, and they are always womanly. One may, perhaps, say that they are the pick of the women whom the average man would pass by. No doubt, this is often the reason why they are open to homosexual advances, but I do not think it is the sole reason. So far as they may be said to constitute a class, they seem to possess a genuine, though not precisely sexual, preference for women over men, and it is this coldness, rather than lack of charm, which often renders men rather indifferent to them.
146 The 1915 edition of Sexual Inversion is included as volume I, part 4, of Havelock Ellis, Studies in the Psychology of Sex (New York: Random House, 1942). Quoted from pp 201-2.
147 Alfred C. Kinsey et al, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co. (1948).
148 Of course, I am not suggesting this is exclusively an American problem. The degradation and exclusion I refer to in the epilogue exists all over the world, including many countries that still deny the very existence of same-sex love. For example, in 2013, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a broad anti-gay bill just months after police were given the right to arrest foreign nationals they suspected of being gay. It classifies “homosexual propaganda” as pornography, and warned that any parent who tells their child that same-sex love is acceptable is subject to arrest, and can be fined by the state.
APPENDIX
149 As with the additional letters, only minor spelling errors have been corrected.
150 ILY was one of their more obvious ciphers, meaning I love you. We do not know how Jim responded, or whether or not the post office held the letter for Freda, as it was addressed to her. Did she, always delighted by attention and intrigue, find the impersonation flattering, entertaining, or worrying? We do not know the answer to that, either. But we do know that Alice penned another, much longer letter to Jim just two days later—and that she played a convincing Freda. She wrote with an ambivalence that encouraged Jim’s affections while also introducing a rivalry. Among her various supposed liaisons, he was, of course, her “favorite,” just as Alice was Freda’s. The emphasis on “keeping promises,” however, sounds very much like the voice of Alice herself, as did her insistence that Jim thought of her less than she thought of him.