Tuesday, March 20, 2018

On This Date in Minnesota History: March 20


*March 20, 1907 – Charles Howard, St. Paul, was stabbed in the breast with a butcher knife by his 18-year-old daughter, Fern Howard, early this morning, and is in critical condition at the City Hospital; physicians do not believe that he will recover.

The girl claims that Howard was threatening his wife with the knife and declares that she seized the weapon as her father poised it over her mother and wrested it from his grasp. Then followed a struggle during which the girl stabbed her father, the blade penetrating his left lung. Mrs. Howard and her daughter were remanded to the Ramsey County Jail today by Judge Hanft to await the outcome of the father’s injuries.




St Paul City Hospital
1

Mrs. Howard and her daughter’s statements of what happened were denied by Mr. Howard in his statement to Assistant County Attorney P. J. Ryan, who was called to the City Hospital this morning when it was decided that Howard was dying. He says that when his wife and daughter came home he wanted to know where they had been and accused them of visiting the home of a woman he did not like. They denied this and a quarrel ensued, he says, and that mother and daughter attacked him.

The police learned that mother and daughter had visited the home of a Mrs. Porter during the evening, where the father had suspected them of being. The daughter was later in the evening seen in a lunch wagon on West Seventh St., while the mother was standing outside. Early yesterday evening Mr. and Mrs. Howard called at the Central police station and informed Lieut. Henry Meyerding that their daughter was not at home and that she was in the habit of staying from the house.

Husband and wife separated after leaving the station and the mother evidently met the daughter afterwards, as they reached home together.

The records of the Humane Society show that the society had been asked several times to care for the children of Mr. and Mrs. Howard, and that Fern Howard had been sent to the Indian School at Morris, Minn. Each time she was sent there she was taken out by the father, who claimed that he was able to support her, and in 1902 he sent $25 cash to the society to show that he had sufficient means to care for his children. On a third application being made to the Indian School, Fern Howard’s admittance was denied by the superintendent on the ground that the young girl was only one-eighth breed Indian and that the law provided for none less than quarter breeds.



Indian School at Morris, Minn.2

Mrs. Jennie Howard is the daughter of Octave LeClaire of Mendota, where he is known as an industrious half-breed.

Charles Howard survived his attack.


The Minneapolis Tribune; “Remanded to the Jail. Mother and Child Placed Behind Bars in St. Paul. Charles Howard, Who Was Stabbed by Daughter, Continues in Critical Condition and Physicians Say He Cannot Recover.”; March 21, 1907; p. 6.

The People’s Press; “Daughter Stabs Father. St. Paul Man Sustains Probably Fatal Injuries.”; Owatonna, Minn.; March 29, 1907; p. 6.
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May 29, 1907 – “She is my daughter, my own flesh and blood. I could not testify against her and place her behind prison bars,” said Charles Howard in St. Paul district court today.

“I want to plead guilty. If I stuck to the first story I told about wrestling the knife from my father and stabbing him in self-defense, I would be telling a lie, and I don’t want to go through life with perjury on my conscience,” said Fern Howard.

The Fern Howard case came to a sudden end in district court today when the youthful defendant pleaded guilty to assault in the second degree, was sentenced to the state reformatory and sentence suspended during her good behavior.

There were two reasons for the abrupt closing of the trial. The wounded father and his daughter had become reconciled and the parents refused to go on the stand and the girl asked to be allowed to plead guilty so that she would not have to perjure herself on the stand.

There was a touching scene in Judge O. B. Lewis’ courtroom when the girl entered her plea. Following the request from Attorney F. L. McGee and K. D. O’Brian, county attorney, the father, with tears in his eyes, told of his forgiveness of his daughter and asked that the court be as easy with her sentence as it could.

Fern Howard was indicted on the charge of assault in the first degree for stabbing her father in March. Her first story was that she had stabbed him in self-defense, wrestling the knife from his hands. She now admits, however, that this was not true and that upon hearing her mother cry for help she rushed out of the room, seized the knife and rushed back, plunging the weapon into her father’s breast.

The Minneapolis Tribune; Father Pleads For Erring Daughter. Girl Who Stabbed father in Court. Now Changes Her Plea to One of Guilty. Father Prays Court for Forgiveness for Daughter’s Act.”; May 30, 1907; p. 6.
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In 2018, we would view this as a very dysfunctional family. In the 1900 U. S. Census, Jennie Howard and her three children, Fern, Florence and Alfred are living with her father, Octave LeClaire, in St. Paul, not her husband.

In the 1905 Minnesota State Census, Fern and her sister Florence are living in the Indian School in Pipestone.


Indian School, Pipestone, Minn.3


1
http://www.lakesnwoods.com/StPaul/1910s.htm

2https://library.morris.umn.edu/collections/american-indian-boarding-schools-collection

3http://www.lakesnwoods.com/PipestoneGallery.htm

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