White Caps
Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2005 2:16 pm
I've always wondered just what were "White Caps" and I don't mean in rough waters. There is mention in the newspapers of the time of the Grand Jury and Marshal Hilliard being threatened by "White Caps".
In the December 5, 1892 Evening Standard:
"We found a bill against Lizzie A. Borden the day before we came in," said the juryman, "and the next morning, when we were considering another case, the district attorney read us a letter which he had received from Brattleboro, Vt., which was to the effect that the best thing he (the district attorney) could do was to let Lizzie A. Borden out and give her her freedom and then lock Bridget Sullivan up in one cell and John V. Morse in another." And the letter ended: "Now if the jurors find a bill against Lizzie A. Borden look out for White Caps."
After Lizzie had been acquitted this was reported in the Boston Globe of June 24, 1893:
"FALL RIVER, June 23 – Marshal Hilliard has received hundreds of anonymous letters from cranks confessing the murder of Mr. and Mrs. Borden, and from others who threatened him for persecuting an innocent woman.
It is suggested by one correspondent that the friends of Miss Borden should organize and behead the marshal in public, as white-caps may overtake him."
I found the following information on "White Caps" at this site:
http://www.paulmusgrave.net/hoosiervigilantes.htm
"The “white caps,” a vigilante-like group bent on enforcing traditional moral standards with force, were first noticed in 1887 in Indiana before spreading across the nation. White caps refrained from deadly force, preferring to use whipping to punish those accused of being “wife beaters, drunkards, poor providers, immoral couples and individuals, lazy and shiftless men, and petty neighborhood thieves.”
Whether the senders of these letters were actual "White Cap" members or just using their notoriety as a threat is unknown.
In the December 5, 1892 Evening Standard:
"We found a bill against Lizzie A. Borden the day before we came in," said the juryman, "and the next morning, when we were considering another case, the district attorney read us a letter which he had received from Brattleboro, Vt., which was to the effect that the best thing he (the district attorney) could do was to let Lizzie A. Borden out and give her her freedom and then lock Bridget Sullivan up in one cell and John V. Morse in another." And the letter ended: "Now if the jurors find a bill against Lizzie A. Borden look out for White Caps."
After Lizzie had been acquitted this was reported in the Boston Globe of June 24, 1893:
"FALL RIVER, June 23 – Marshal Hilliard has received hundreds of anonymous letters from cranks confessing the murder of Mr. and Mrs. Borden, and from others who threatened him for persecuting an innocent woman.
It is suggested by one correspondent that the friends of Miss Borden should organize and behead the marshal in public, as white-caps may overtake him."
I found the following information on "White Caps" at this site:
http://www.paulmusgrave.net/hoosiervigilantes.htm
"The “white caps,” a vigilante-like group bent on enforcing traditional moral standards with force, were first noticed in 1887 in Indiana before spreading across the nation. White caps refrained from deadly force, preferring to use whipping to punish those accused of being “wife beaters, drunkards, poor providers, immoral couples and individuals, lazy and shiftless men, and petty neighborhood thieves.”
Whether the senders of these letters were actual "White Cap" members or just using their notoriety as a threat is unknown.