Mary Harris (murderer)
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Mary Harris was an American woman who murdered Adoniram Burroughs. Her trial marked the "first time in a U.S. court-room that expert medical testimony supported a plea of paroxysmal emporary insanity in a murder defense."


Biography

Mary Harris was born in a poor, family in Burlington, Iowa. She received very little education, and worked at a hatmaking shop for much of her early life. While working at the shop, Adoniram Judson Burroughs fell in love with her. He courted her for much of the next three years, providing money and a basic education to Harris. Burroughs soon moved to
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, in search of better business prospects. When Harris turned eighteen, Burroughs asked her to travel to Chicago to be with him. Burroughs soon found work in Washington D. C., and moved yet again. Burroughs continued to write, and on September 8, 1863 Harris received an unsigned letter that she assumed was that of Burroughs. Harris, unsure sent a reply to the letter, and asked the postal clerk to find out who the letter was to. The person who picked up the letter looked "very like" Burroughs. Harris went to the address that the letters came from, and found no one there. Harris soon found that Burroughs had married another woman. Harris, distraught, engaged in events of increasingly erratic behavior, until she found where Adoniram Burroughs had been living, and shot him twice outside his office on 31 January 1865. In the subsequent trial, Harris pled insanity, and her lawyer, Joseph H. Bradley, supported her. The case, tried between 3 July and 19 July, began to attract media attention, with the ''
Washington Evening Star ''The Washington Star'', previously known as the ''Washington Star-News'' and the Washington ''Evening Star'', was a daily afternoon newspaper published in Washington, D.C., between 1852 and 1981. The Sunday edition was known as the ''Sunday Sta ...
'' being the first to publish details. The ''
New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid ...
'' soon picked up on the story as well, and published it as front-page news. The jury eventually returned a verdict of 'not guilty'.


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* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Harris, Mary American female murderers People from Burlington, Iowa 19th-century American women