PRESENT AT A HANGING
An
old man named Daniel Baker, living near Lebanon, Iowa, was suspected by his
neighbors of having murdered a peddler who had obtained permission to pass the
night at his house. This was in 1853, when peddling was more common in the
Western country than it is now, and was attended with considerable danger. The
peddler with his pack traversed the country by all manner of lonely roads, and
was compelled to rely upon the country people for hospitality. This brought him
into relation with queer characters, some of whom were not altogether
scrupulous in their methods of making a living, murder being an acceptable
means to that end. It occasionally occurred that a peddler with diminished pack
and swollen purse would be traced to the lonely dwelling of some rough
character and never could be traced beyond. This was so in the case of “old man
Baker,” as he was always called. (Such names are given in the western
“settlements” only to elderly persons who are not esteemed; to the general
disrepute of social unworth is affixed the special reproach of age.) A peddler
came to his house and none went away - that is all that anybody knew.
Seven
years later the Rev. Mr. Cummings, a Baptist minister well known in that part
of the country, was driving by Baker’s farm one night. It was not very dark:
there was a bit of moon somewhere above the light veil of mist that lay along
the earth. Mr. Cummings, who was at all times a cheerful person, was whistling
a tune, which he would occasionally interrupt to speak a word of friendly
encouragement to his horse. As he came to a little bridge across a dry ravine
he saw the figure of a man standing upon it, clearly outlined against the gray
background of a misty forest. The man had something strapped on his back and
carried a heavy stick - obviously an itinerant peddler. His attitude had in it
a suggestion of abstraction, like that of a sleepwalker. Mr. Cummings reined in
his horse when he arrived in front of him, gave him a pleasant salutation and
invited him to a seat in the vehicle - “if you are going my way,” he added. The
man raised his head, looked him full in the face, but neither answered nor made
any further movement. The minister, with good-natured persistence, repeated his
invitation. At this the man threw his right hand forward from his side and
pointed downward as he stood on the extreme edge of the bridge. Mr. Cummings
looked past him, over into the ravine, saw nothing unusual and withdrew his
eyes to address the man again. He had disappeared. The horse, which all this
time had been uncommonly restless, gave at the same moment a snort of terror
and started to run away. Before he had regained control of the animal the
minister was at the crest of the hill a hundred
yards along. He looked back and saw the figure again, at the same place and in
the same attitude as when he had first observed it. Then for the first time he
was conscious of a sense of the supernatural and drove home as rapidly as his
willing horse would go.
On arriving at home he
related his adventure to his family, and early the next morning, accompanied by
two neighbors, John White Corwell and Abner Raiser, returned to the spot. They
found the body of old man Baker hanging by the neck from one of the beams of
the bridge, immediately beneath the spot where the apparition had stood. A
thick coating of dust, slightly dampened by the mist, covered the floor of the
bridge, but the only footprints were those of Mr. Cummings’ horse.
In
taking down the body the men disturbed the loose, friable earth of the slope
below it, disclosing human bones already nearly uncovered by the action of
water and frost. They were identified as those of the lost peddler. At the
double inquest the coroner’s jury found that Daniel Baker died by his own hand
while suffering from temporary insanity, and that Samuel Morritz was murdered
by some person or persons to the jury unknown.
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