The weeks passed as Stinney languished in prison. Some
local organizations, like the N.A.A.C.P., churches and unions
appealed to Governor Olin D. Johnston to stop the execution. The
Daily Item reported on June 13, 1944 “The A.M.E. Church
protested to Governor Olin D. Johnston in a telegram the imminent
execution June 16 of a 14 year old Negro boy convicted of the murder
of a young white girl”. A few days before the scheduled date, the Associated
Press published a story on the Stinney case. The Governor’s
office received hundreds of pleas to intervene in the name of mercy
and fairness. Many cited Stinney’s age as an extraordinary factor
that deserved consideration. One message received by the
Governor’s Office read: “Child execution is only for Hitler”
(Brock, p. D2). Others, however, had their own reasons for
Stinney to die: “Sure glad to hear of your decision regarding the
nigger Stinney” (Bruck, p. D2). Governor Johnston was unmoved by
public sentiment and decided not to intervene. The Daily Item
wrote: “The Governor said Friday he had studied the case and found
no reason to intervene making this statement after the C.I.O.,
Tobacco Worker’s Union, the National Maritime Union and the White
and Negro Ministerial Unions at Charleston asked him to commute the
sentence to life imprisonment (June 13, 1944).
On the morning of June 16, 1944, a year in which 120 other
convicts were executed in America’s prisons (U.S. Department of
Justice), George Junius Stinney Jr. began his last walk on this
earth at 7:30 AM. He carried a bible under one arm as he was
escorted to the electric chair by prison guards. Stinney was
of slight build. The teen-ager weighed just over 90 lbs and stood 5
feet, 1 inch tall. Since the electric chair was designed and
constructed for adults, the attendants had a difficult time
strapping him firmly into the seat. The mask that fitted upon the
face also did not fit properly. Witnesses to the execution included
Betty June’s father and brother Raymond. “Stinney refused to
make any statement when given the opportunity by prison officials”
(Daily Item, June 17, 1944). It was reported that the force
of the electricity caused the mask to slip away from Stinney’s
head, exposing his face to the gallery. Witnesses, it was said,
would never forget the horror etched on Stinney’s childlike face
in those final moments. He was pronounced dead less than four
minutes later[1].
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Certificate of Execution signed by
twelve witnesses including Betty June's brother Raymond |
Although legitimate questions linger concerning the quality of
Stinney’s defense team, no appeal was ever made. Politics may have
played a strong role in that decision. In 1944, Plowden was
scheduled to run for public office on the state level. There was
speculation that he did not want to disrupt the community by
appearing to be too enthusiastic about defending a killer who many
felt deserved to die for his offense. Years later, in an interview,
Plowden commented on the case: “There was nothing to appeal on”
and added the Stinney family had no funds to continue the case
(Bruck, sec. D).
Initially, it may appear that Stinney’s trial and execution
were the product of a racist justice system, but it isn’t that
final. Perhaps a case could be made as to the objectivity and
fairness of the judicial process. The judge, prosecutor, defense
attorney and jury all had friends, relatives and co-workers who
lived in Alcolu. The Alderman Lumber Company employed hundreds of
workers in the area who participated in the search. The crime and
its lurid details were highly publicized and the racial nature of
the case certainly influenced some of the community as well.
However, nothing illegal was done during the investigation and
prosecution of the case. All the procedures utilized by the police,
courts, prosecution and prison system conform to the existing
standards and legal requirements of the time and place. The court
was well aware of Stinney’s age but the laws of the time allowed
for a capital prosecution of a 14-year-old defendant.
The day after Stinney’s execution, June 16, 1944, a small,
three-inch article appeared in The State newspaper, which contained
the following line “Stinney, 14 years and five months old, was the
youngest person ever to die in the chair”[2].
Incredibly, the crime for which he was executed had occurred just
81 days before, a time span that seems unthinkable to us today. In
modern times, it is common for many years to pass before a convicted
killer faces an execution. Stinney was buried in an unknown location
and immediately forgotten by everyone except his family. In 1994, on
the 50th anniversary of the case, Stinney’s sister, Catherine
Robinson was interviewed. She stated that her brother wrote to her
parents while he was on Death Row in Columbia, South Carolina.
George told them he was innocent (The State, June 17, 1994).
However, Vermelle Tucker, Betty June’s sister, had this to say in
the same article: “All my dad said was ‘Thank God he won’t do
it to anybody else’” (The State, June 17, 1994). Indeed,
he never would. But George Junius Stinney Jr., on June 16, 1944,
became a tragic and unwilling fragment of American history as the
youngest person legally executed in America during the 20th
century.
[1]
Oddly enough, just five minutes later, another black man, one Bruce
Hamilton was also executed at Central Correction Institution for
criminal assault. Unlike Stinney, Hamilton went to his death
insisting on his innocence ( The State June 17, 1944).
[2]
Actually, since Stinney was born October 21, 1929, he was just shy
of 14 years, 7 months.
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