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1930 headline newspaper Execution ARIZONA HANGS the 1st WOMAN in its HISTORY

$ 13.2

Availability: 50 in stock
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  • Condition: Used
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    Description

    1930 headline newspaper Execution ARIZONA HANGS the 1st WOMAN in its HISTORY
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    inv # 8S-301
    SEE PHOTO----- COMPLETE, ORIGINAL NEWSPAPER, the
    Youngstown Vindicator
    (OHIO) dated Feb 21, 1930.
    This newspaper contains a bold banner headline and report of the
    FIRST EXECUTION by HANGING of a WOMAN in Arizona
    !!
    Eva Dugan (1878 – February 21, 1930) was a convicted murderer whose execution by hanging at the state prison in Florence, Arizona resulted in her decapitation and influenced the state of Arizona to replace hanging with the lethal gas chamber as a method of execution.
    Born in 1878, Dugan wound up in Juneau, Alaska after trekking north during the Klondike Gold Rush and became a cabaret singer. She subsequently moved to Pima County, Arizona, where she worked for an elderly chicken rancher, Andrew J. Mathis, as a housekeeper. Shortly after her employment was terminated for unknown reasons, Mathis disappeared, as did some of his possessions, his Dodge Coupe automobile and his cash box. Neighbors reported that Dugan had tried to sell some of his possessions before she disappeared as well.
    The police discovered Dugan had a father in California and a daughter in White Plains, New York. She had been married five times, and all her husbands had disappeared. The Dodge Coupe was sold by her for 0 in Kansas City, Missouri. She was arrested in White Plains when a postal clerk, alerted by the police, intercepted a postcard to her from her father in California. She was extradited back to Arizona to face auto theft charges.
    Convicted of auto theft, she was imprisoned. Nine months later, a camper found Mathis' decomposed remains on his ranch. Dugan was then tried for murder in a short trial based mostly on circumstantial evidence. The prosecution proved to the jury's satisfaction that Dugan had murdered Mathis with an axe. She was allegedly aided in the murder by "Jack", a teenage boy, who was never found.
    After her conviction, in her final statement, she told the jurors, “Well, I’ll die with my boots on, an’ in full health. An’ that’s more’n most of you old coots’ll be able to boast on.” She would remain defiant to the end.
    Dugan gave interviews to the press for .00 each and sold embroidered handkerchiefs she knitted while imprisoned to pay for her own coffin. She also made for her hanging a silk, beaded "jazz dress", but later relented and wore a cheap dress as she was worried that her silk wrapper "might get mussed." She remained upbeat, so much so that Time magazine called her "Cheerful Eva" in a March 3, 1930 story about her execution.
    The day before the hanging, there were rumors she planned to kill herself before being hanged, and her cell was searched and a bottle of raw ammonia and three razor blades hidden in a dress were confiscated.
    Dugan's appeal for clemency on the grounds of mental illness was denied and she was taken to the gallows at 5 a.m. on the morning of February 21, 1930. She was the first woman to be executed by the state of Arizona, and it was the first execution in Arizona history in which women were permitted as witnesses. Aside from Dugan, there were five women in the death chamber.
    According to a newspaper account, Dugan was composed as she mounted the gallows. She told the guards, "Don't hold my arms so tight, the people will think I'm afraid." She swayed slightly when the noose was put around her neck and shook her head negative when asked if she had any final words.
    The trap was sprung at 5:11 and at the end of the drop, the snap of the rope decapitated her, sending Dugan's head rolling to a stop at the feet of the spectators. The grisly scene caused five witnesses (two women and three men) to faint. With the replacement of the gallows by the gas chamber in Arizona in 1934, Dugan has the distinction of being the only woman to be executed by hanging in the Grand Canyon State.
    Very good condition. Small mailing subscription label at top of newspaper. This listing includes the complete entire original newspaper, NOT just a clipping or a page of it. STEPHEN A. GOLDMAN HISTORICAL NEWSPAPERS stands behind all of the items that we sell with a no questions asked, money back guarantee. Every item we sell is an original newspaper printed on the date indicated at the beginning of its description. U.S. buyers pay priority mail postage which includes waterproof plastic and a heavy cardboard flat to protect your purchase from damage in the mail. International postage is quoted when we are informed as to where the package is to be sent. We do combine postage (to reduce postage costs) for multiple purchases sent in the same package.
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