MARSHALL—REPUBLICAN,
VOL. IX. MARSHALL .
SALINE COUNTY , MISSOURI . JUNE 3. 1900. NO. 13.
SUICIDE IN HIS CELL.
James Coffey, a Farmer, Hangs Himself While
Confined in the City Jail. Insanity
the Cause.
the Cause.
Fatalities have become
most frequent happenings about Marshall
in the past few weeks. Suicide and other
manner of death follow so fast upon the tread of each other that they occasion
little talk and less excitement. The last sensational happening of this nature,
occurred Tuesday morning, an inmate of the city jail ending his life by hanging
himself.
James Coffey was the suicide. He was formerly a farmer living about 4 1/2 miles northeast of
Coffey seemed to return
to his reason some what, and his trial before the Probate court led to the
opinion that he would soon regain his mind completely. He was therefore ordered
held in charge for a few days, when if recovery followed he was to be released
and allowed to return home. As the
county had no suitable place for his confinement, the city officers took him to
the jail quarters of the city hall, where in the day time he was allowed the
freedom of the corridor.
The prisoner, who in his
ravings, imagined himself pursued by a threatening mob, was visited on Monday
afternoon by his wife, who brought him a pie wrapped in a tea towel. Monday night and Tuesday morning his actions
evidenced a more violent insanity. At 9:30 Tuesday morning, keeper of the jail,
Brice, when accompanying a lady visitor to his cell, discovered Coffey hanging
from the upper birth of his cell, his body suspended by means of the tea-towel
tied around his neck and attached to the lattice work of the birth.
Assistance was at once
called, little Charley Herndon cutting the cloth by which he hung, but the
insane man was lifeless. The upper birth is only about five feet from the floor,
and Coffey, in order to accomplish his death, had thrown his feet from under
him allowing the weight of his body to produce a choking death.
The coroner was notified
and summoned a jury at once which returned a verdict that the deceased came to
his death by "hanging himself with a towel," signed by Jno.
Cunningham, foreman; J. R. Plynu, W. D. Black, A. J. Graves ,
M. T. Campbell and N. F. Randolph.
His body was removed to the undertaking rooms and thence to his home on the farm, the burial taking place Wednesday at
Note: This was James T. Coffey who was born c1852 in Tennessee. His wife was Sarah E. Moore Coffey, born c1861 in Missouri. They appeared in the 1900 Marshall Twp., Saline Co., MO census. Their children then (all born in MO) were Grover C., born c1885; Hattie, born c1887; Joseph, born c1889; James Q., born c1875 in KY and a lodger, John Davison, age 29, born in MO. James was enumerated as James P., age 48, born in TN. Sarah was enumerated as head of household, likely meaning that James was already known to be incapacitated to some degree.
Who were the
parents of James?
Sources:
United States Census, 1900," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M3D6-R5P
: accessed 10 Mar 2014), James P Coffee in household of Sarah E Coffey,
Marshall Township (excl. Marshall city, incl. Missouri Valley College), Saline,
Missouri, United States; citing sheet , family 290, NARA microfilm publication
T623, FHL microfilm 1240902
Library of Congress (http://tinyurl.com/kjulmmm)