Sonora’s
First Hanging a Group Effort
by Pat Perry
On Thursday, June 26,
1851, James Hill, a desperate fellow, altogether too lazy to aspire to
the dishonor of a full fledged desperado, entered the store of B. A.
Mardis in Campo Seco armed with a revolver in one hand and a Bowie knife
in the other. Mardis was in his bunk at the time and Hill told him as
he came in that if he opened his eyes he would blow his brains out.
Under the circumstances Mardis could do no better than to obey the
command. Hill robbed the safe and decamped.
The local population
had come to the conclusion that patience had ceased to be a virtue and
they gathered in force for the purpose of making an example of this
thief. The day after the robbery, they surrounded his cabin, arrested
him and brought him before acting Judge John Ward at Campo Seco. The
crowd acted as a jury, and after hearing the testimony, which they
thought conclusively determined the guilt of Hill, the question was put
to the vote and a verdict of guilty rendered against him, the judgment
of the court being that he be hanged by the neck until he was dead,
sentence to be executed upon him forthwith.
Hill was then carried
into town, a rope procured, and an attempt made to hang him from the
limb of a white oak tree, but it was discovered, after experimenting
with the writhing wretch, that a better tree was needed. The doomed man
was then dragged, with the rope around his neck, to a black oak standing
in the rear of Victor Gallut’s tin shop. Here the rope was again thrown
over a limb, and a long line of men drew the body up limp and lifeless,
for in their first attempt to hang him, and their subsequent efforts to
drag him to the black oak, they had choked him to death.
The crowd, satisfied
with their terrible work, left the body swinging from the limb. And so
died James Hill, the first man hanged within the city limits of Sonora.