Portage County's Only Lynching
by
SUSAN ALLEN
of the Journal
In its 150 years, Portage County has experienced only one lynching and
has seen only one law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty both
occurring in related events that happened within eight days of each other.
Shortly after noon on Oct. 11, 1875, Sheriff Joseph Baker was shot by
one of the Courtwright brothers, Isiah or Amos, at a farm at the intersection
of highways J and D in the town of Buena Vista. Baker was called to the
scene to evict the Courtwrights from the farm they had lost because of
failure to pay debts.
Evidently, Amos Courtwright and a man named Luther Hanchett, a Plover
lawyer, had owned a sawmill together, but their partnership dissolved in
1856. Courtwright was to retain possession of the mill providing that he
pay all of the mill’s debts and give an additional $2,000 to Hanchett.
When Courtwright didn’t pay, Hanchetts heirs - for Hanchett had died
by then - sued to retain the farm. A court ordered the farm to be sold
and the money applied to Courtwright’s debt. Hanchett’s lawyer, James Raymond,
became owner of the land and rented it to L. W. Richardson, who became
the victim of a few of the Courtwright’s shenanigans.
At one time, Richardson’s horses were stolen and while he was out looking
for them, the Courtwrights had moved back into the house. On another occasion,
Richardson returned from a trip to find the Courtwrights living in his
home.
Richardson called Sheriff Baker, who at first tried to negotiate with
the Courtwrights. When he stepped onto the land, Baker was shot in the
chest. The event was witnessed by about 40 neighbors whom Baker had called
to form a posse.
The posse returned fire and the sheriff ordered his men to set fire
to the farmhouse. Although the Courtwrights and their families escaped,
they were later found and thrown in jail. The sheriff died the next day
from his injuries.
Angry with the Courtwrights, a crowd had tried unsuccessfully at least
once during the following week to break into the jail and lynch the two
brothers. On the second time, after threatening a guard, the mob succeeded
in entering the jail.
The Courtwrights put up a fight, but lost. Amos Courtwright’s hat was
found on the floor riddled with cuts, along with blood and locks of hair.
A mob of 40 people attacked the jail that night and succeeded in its mission
in 10 minutes. It took the two men to what is now the site of the Portage
County Health Care Center at the intersection of Water Street and Whiting
Avenue.
The crowd put ropes around their necks, while tying one end around a
pine tree, and then pushed the two men out of the wagon that had brought
them there. The bodies were left there overnight and hundreds of people
came to see them. Eventually they were cut down and the brothers were buried
side-by-side in the same grave at the Plover Cemetery.
No evidence was ever found to identify any members of the mob or their
origins. |