Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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The assassinat­ion of Mayor Carter Harrison III shocked Chicago so much that the afternoon paper, Chicago Daily News, published a rare evening edition to report on the Oct. 23, 1893, crime.

“The murderer is under arrest,” the paper announced. “He gives his name as Eugene Patrick Prendergas­t” — though his name was actually Patrick Eugene Prendergas­t.

On that night, Prendergas­t knocked on the door of Harrison’s mansion and insisted to the maid that he see the mayor, the Daily News reported. The maid roused a napping Harrison in the parlor and sent him out to greet his guest in the hallway, but she didn’t follow him.

“Almost immediatel­y she heard a shot which was quickly followed by two others,” the paper said. “Then there was the sound of a heavy fall.”

The mayor’s son, William Preston Harrison, heard the shots and rushed to see what had happened, the paper reported. Spooked, Prendergas­t ran from the home, but Chicago police later caught up with him and arrested him. Though he had famed defense attorney Clarence Darrow on his side, Prendergas­t lost his case and was sentenced to die for his crime.

On July 13, 1894, the Daily News covered Prendergas­t’s execution. An hour before the event, spectators gathered and “talked in low tones” as they waited for the condemned to appear. At 11:44 a.m., the sheriff and jailer appeared, followed by Prendergas­t and his spiritual adviser Father Berry. Berry held a small prayer book, but neither of them spoke.

“Great drops of perspirati­on glistened on his forehead and he was white as the robe he wore. But he did not break down, by shutting his teeth tightly together so that his under jaw rigidly protruded, he awaited the end,” the paper reported.

At the scaffold, the jailer restrained Prendergas­t’s ankles and arms, then paused to give him a moment to speak, but the condemned man said nothing.

The jailer then slipped the white hood over Prendergas­t’s eyes, “shutting out his last sight of the world.” Moments later, the jailer signaled to the hangman, who dropped the trapdoor that left Prendergas­t’s body to dangle.

“Prendergas­t retained his nerve to the end and approached his doom without faltering,” the paper reported. “He made no dying speech on the scaffold and not a word was spoken from the time he stopped on the trap until the end. The drop fell at 11:47 [a.m.], and the body was cut down at 11:58.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES ARCHIVE ?? A portrait of Patrick Eugene Prendergas­t as it appeared in the July 13, 1894, edition of the Chicago Daily News.
SUN-TIMES ARCHIVE A portrait of Patrick Eugene Prendergas­t as it appeared in the July 13, 1894, edition of the Chicago Daily News.

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