Virginia Christian
Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Template wrapper".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters". Virginia Christian (August 15, 1895 – August 16, 1912) was an African American teenager executed by the state of Virginia. Convicted of first degree murder for killing her white employer Ida Belote, Christian became the only female minor executed in the United States in the 20th century.
Virginia Christian left school at age 13 to work for Ida Belote. On March 18, 1912, when Christian was 16, Belote accused Christian of theft and attacked her. In response, Christian struck her with a broom handle and forced a towel down her throat, killing her. Christian was arrested and tried before an entirely white and male jury. Her lawyers, Joseph Thomas Newsome and George Washington Fields, argued that the killing was not premeditated, but the jury found her guilty of first degree murder after only 23 minutes of deliberation. Despite a Virginia law aimed at placing minors in reformatories for first-time offenses, Christian was sentenced to death.
Christian's case drew backlash from newspapers and civil rights advocates, who considered it unjust to execute an underage girl and believed her sentence was racist. Advocates also questioned whether Christian was mentally disabled. The National Association of Colored Women and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People petitioned Virginia governor William Hodges Mann to commute her sentence. The backlash was especially strong in Chicago, where newspaper editor E. Van Putnam led an aggressive campaign against her execution. Ultimately, Mann refused to pardon Christian; she was killed by electrocution on August 16, 1912.
Early life
Virginia Christian was born on August 15, 1895.Template:Sfn She was the third child and oldest daughter of Henry Christian and Charlotte Christian, who lived in Hampton, Virginia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Her father earned $1.25 per day working as a fisherman and performing odd jobs.Template:Sfn When Virginia was 13, her mother became paralyzed and unable to work;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn to help support her family, Virginia dropped out of her classes at the Whittier Training School and began working as a laundress for a white woman named Ida Belote, earning $4 per week.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Before marrying Henry, Charlotte Christian had worked for the Belotes, and Henry had sold them fish.Template:Sfn Belote had a reputation for being difficult, temperamental, and sometimes abusive;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Virginia's father and aunt both discouraged her from taking the job.Template:Sfn
Some contemporary authors, including Victor Streib, Lynn Sametz, and David V. Baker, believe Christian was intellectually disabled.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn At the time, the Newport News Times-Herald wrote that "her intelligence is below average",Template:Sfn the Hampton Monitor called her "crazy" and unaware of her actions,Template:Sfn and the Richmond Times-Dispatch wrote that she "possesses little sensibility".Template:Sfn Other reports described her as "dull".Template:Sfn However, she likely never received a formal diagnosis.Template:Sfn
Killing of Ida Belote
On March 18, 1912, Ida Belote visited the Christian family's house and accused Virginia of stealing a skirt. Charlotte told Virginia to visit Belote's house and resolve the dispute.Template:Sfn Once Virginia arrived, Belote also accused her of stealing a gold locket.Template:Sfn Christian denied stealing anything and threatened to quit.Template:Sfn In response, Belote attacked her with a spittoon. Christian responded by striking Belote's head with a broomstick, then forced a towel five inches down her throat, suffocating her. Christian later stated she and Belote both raced to grab separate broom handles, and that she put the towel in Belote's mouth to stop her from screaming. She fled with Belote's pocketbook, which contained $4 and a ring.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
After the confrontation, Christian returned home to do chores. Two of Belote's children discovered her body, and the police reported seeing a trail of blood and overturned furniture in her house.Template:Sfn One hour and 15 minutes after the killing, Virginia was arrested.Template:Sfn She had no prior criminal record.Template:Sfn In jail, without speaking to an attorney, she confessed to attacking Belote. However, she maintained that she acted in self-defense and had not meant to kill her.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Dr. George Vanderslice, the county coroner, led a two-day inquest before a grand jury of six white men. After hearing testimony from two of Belote's daughters, the grand jury indicted Christian on March 20, 1912.Template:Sfn
Belote's murder sparked tensions between the town's white and black residents,Template:Sfn and Ida Belote's brother Lewter Hobbs discussed forming a lynch mob.Template:Sfn Many black residents of Hampton, including Reverend John Gray, publicly denounced Christian.Template:Sfn
Trial
Background
In 1910, Virginia had passed a law shielding first-time offenders under the age of 17 from prison sentences; instead, underage offenders were to be placed in reformatories. However, the bill made exceptions for rape or when "the offense is aggravated, or the ends of justice demand otherwise".Template:Sfn The state of Virginia did not have a dedicated reformatory for black girls, but sometimes transferred them to a reformatory in Baltimore.Template:Sfn First degree murder carried a mandatory death penalty.Template:Sfn
Under Virginia's revised 1902 constitution, only registered voters could be jurors in criminal trials, and first degree murder cases required jury verdicts. However, black men were systematically disenfranchised, and women did not gain the right to vote in Virginia until 1920. In 1904, Virginia codified an 1880 court decision that defendants had no legal right to a racially diverse jury.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Accordingly, Christian's jury was made up of exclusively white men.Template:Sfn
Proceedings
Christian's trial began on April 8, 1912.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Her parents borrowed money to pay her legal fees, using their house as collateral.Template:Sfn She was defended by two black lawyers: Joseph Thomas Newsome and George Washington Fields.Template:Sfn The trial drew a large audience, which sat in separate sections of the courtroom segregated by race.Template:Sfn
Six witnesses, including one of Belote's daughters, established Christian's presence near Belote's house on the morning of her death.Template:Sfn The defense conceded that Christian killed Belote, but argued she acted out of passion, not malice, and therefore lacked the mens rea necessary for first degree murder.Template:Sfn The prosecution argued that Christian wanted to rob Belote, and that the attack was the result of premeditated burglary, citing the money Christian took.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The prosecution also argued that forcing the towel so far down Belote's throat required an instrument and would have taken minutes, which was sufficient to show premeditation.Template:Sfn The defense called two expert witnesses to argue Belote did not die of asphyxiation. However, county coroner Dr. Vanderslice testified that asphyxiation was in fact the cause of death, and that Belote was unconscious when the towel was forced in her mouth.Template:Sfn The police also claimed Christian had washed her hands in Belote's kitchen after killing her, suggesting she was not overcome with passion.Template:Sfn Although Belote had a reputation for treating her employees poorly, Christian's lawyers did not leverage this during the trial.Template:Sfn
The state argued that Christian was actually an adult, leaving the defense to prove she was underage. Virginia's father Henry Christian testified that she was born on February 22, but could not give her birth year. The defense introduced the Christian family Bible and Virginia's school records as evidence, which both established her birthday as August 15, 1895.Template:Sfn
Christian asked to testify in her own defense, but her lawyers refused; Fields considered her "a coarse-mannered, homely girl and extremely ignorant", and he and Newsome worried she might cause a disturbance or alienate the jury.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Both attorneys later regretted this decision, believing her testimony could have proven her lack of premeditation, offered support for an appeal, or prompted a new trial.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Verdict and appeal
On April 9, after 23 minutes of deliberation, the jury returned a verdict of guilty.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Christian was sentenced to death by electrocution, with a scheduled execution date of June 21.Template:Sfn
After the trial, Christian's lawyers submitted a writ of error to the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, arguing that the lower court violated state law by not sending Christian to a reformatory.Template:Sfn On June 12, the Court of Appeals initially announced it would grant the writ, then revised its announcement and denied the appeal.Template:Sfn
Public reaction
After the trial, multiple groups petitioned William Hodges Mann, the governor of Virginia, for clemency, including the National Association of Colored Women (NACW) and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On July 24, Mary Church Terrell, the president of the NACW, met with Governor Mann alongside fellow activist Nellie Griswold Francis. She presented a petition signed by 300 members of the NACW and asked Mann to commute Christian's death sentence due to her young age. In response, Mann defended the court's decision and argued her age should not be a factor, since most criminals in the United States were young. Instead of a pardon, he granted a two week reprieve so that the NACW could hire private detectives to find new evidence. He also allowed Terrell to meet with Christian in jail.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
On August 1, the NAWC wrote a letter to the NAACP about Christian's case.Template:Sfn The NAACP established the Virginia Christian Litigation Fund, which raised $500 to research grounds for a new trial, and urged its members to write to Governor Mann.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On August 5, a representative from the NAACP met with Mann to request a commutation, citing Christian's age and the unlikeliness that Belote's death was premeditated. However, Mann stated he believed Christian had premeditated the crime in order to steal Belote's money. Mann also incorrectly claimed Belote was 70 years old rather than 51.Template:Sfn On August 14, attorney E. Griffith Dods also met with Mann on behalf of the NAACP.Template:Sfn Finally, in September, W.E.B Du Bois wrote an article in The Crisis about Christian's case.Template:Sfn
The African American newspapers The Chicago Defender, The Cleveland Gazette, and The Washington Bee opposed Christian's execution.Template:Sfn John Mitchell, editor of the Richmond Planet, called the crime "diabolical", but felt the state should show mercy to Christian since she was a woman.Template:Sfn Charles Mears, a reporter for the Times-Herald who recorded Christian's original confession, wrote two letters to Governor Mann insisting that the crime was not premeditated.Template:Sfn Mann also received letters from YWCA president Lucy Brooks Lewis, the Colored Young Women's Christian Association of Baltimore,Template:Sfn and Virginia's mother Charlotte, who wrote:Template:Sfn
Reactions in Chicago
E. Van Putnam, editor of The Chicago Daily World,Template:Efn and William Walling, an NAACP board member who wrote for the Daily World, aggressively campaigned against Christian's execution. The newspaper, which had the largest readership in Chicago, printed the NACW petition in full, called Christian's sentence "an indictment against society", condemned her conviction as racist, criticized the state of Virginia for executing women but not allowing them to vote, and urged readers to write Governor Mann. Putnam questioned Christian's competence and offered to pay for her to be mentally examined.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In response, Mann insisted Christian was competent and sane, highlighting her ability to write letters.Template:Sfn Mann also emphasized that the state had offered her an education, and claimed "I have not taken into consideration sex or color".Template:Sfn The Daily World prominently advocated for Christian for two weeks,Template:Sfn including seven days of front page coverage.Template:Sfn Inspired by the paper's campaign, political and business leaders across Chicago criticized the sentence, including U.S. Congressman Martin B. Madden.Template:Sfn
Other Chicago newspapers echoed the Daily World. The Chicago Examiner hired a lawyer to meet with Governor Mann. The Chicago Defender argued Christian's sentence should be reduced to life in prison, and claimed the state of Virginia was partially culpable for Belote's death, since it had denied Christian a proper education and social support. In response, the Richmond Times-Dispatch defended Christian's sentence, emphasized the brutality of Belote's death and the death penalty's role in deterring future crimes, and generally criticized the Chicago press.Template:Sfn
Execution
On August 13, 1912, Governor Mann announced he would no longer delay Christian's execution, which was to take place on August 16.Template:Sfn On the 16th, Mann reiterated that he would not commute Christian's sentence and affirmed his belief that she was guilty of premeditated murder.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Newspapers reported on Christian's stoicism leading up to her death.Template:Sfn Before her execution, Christian wrote to her family and supporters:Template:Sfn
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I know that I am getting no more than I deserve. I am prepared to answer for my sins, and I believe that the Lord has forgiven me. I fear that Mrs. Belote may not have been Christian. I blame no one for my situation. I hope to meet Mrs. Belote in heaven. I thank all who have worked on my behalf.
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Christian was electrocuted in the state prison in Richmond at 7:23 am on August 16, 1912, five months after Belote's death and one day after her 17th birthday.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn She received three electric shocks, although the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported she died after the first.Template:Sfn Her death certificate was signed by prison surgeon Dr. Herbert Mann, the nephew of Governor Mann.Template:Sfn Christian was the first woman killed by electrocution in the SouthTemplate:Sfn and the only underage girl executed in the United States in the 20th century.Template:Sfn
Aftermath
Christian was buried at the First Baptist Church cemetery in Hampton, although some newspapers incorrectly reported that her body went to a state medical school.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Over 1,500 people attended her funeral.Template:Sfn Despite widespread opposition to her execution, there were no riots or protests following her death.Template:Sfn
At the time of Christian's death, there were no reformatories in the state of Virginia for black girls.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In discussing her death sentence, The Crisis criticized the state of Virginia for not providing one.Template:Sfn After Christian's execution, the Virginia State Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs established the first such reformatory, the Virginia Industrial School for Colored Girls, in 1915.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Its first superintendent, Janie Porter Barrett, believed she could have saved Christian's life if the school had opened earlier.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
In 2016, Ross Howell Jr. adapted Christian's story into the novel Forsaken.Template:Sfn
See also
- Capital punishment for juveniles in the United States
- Hannah Ocuish
- Mary (slave)
- George Stinney
- James Arcene
- Forsaken, a historical novel written about Christian
References
Notes
Citations
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Bibliography
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External links
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- Forsaken: The Digital Bibliography at Virginia Memory
- Pages with script errors
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- 1895 births
- 1912 deaths
- 20th-century executions of American people
- 20th-century executions by Virginia
- American people executed for murder
- Children executed by the United States
- Executed African-American people
- Executed people from Virginia
- People convicted of murder by Virginia
- People from Hampton, Virginia
- People executed by Virginia by electric chair