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Virginia Christian

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17-year old American girl executed in 1912

Virginia Christian
Photograph of Virginia Christian in 1912
Born(1895-08-15)August 15, 1895
Hampton City, Virginia, U.S.
DiedAugust 16, 1912(1912-08-16) (aged 17)
Virginia State Penitentiary, Richmond, Virginia, U.S.
Cause of deathExecution by electrocution
Resting placeFirst Baptist Church-Hampton Cemetery
Hampton City, Virginia, U.S.
Other namesGennie
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)First degree murder
Criminal penaltyDeath

Virginia Christian (August 15, 1895 – August 16, 1912) was a child executed in the United States. She was the first female executed in the 20th century in the state of Virginia. She was also the only female child executed by electric chair and, to date, the last female executed in the electric chair by the Commonwealth of Virginia. The state did not execute another female prisoner until Teresa Lewis in 2010.

Christian, an intellectually disabled black maid, was convicted of the murder of her employer Ida Belote, a 52-year-old white woman, in her home at Hampton on March 18, 1912.

Incident

Belote is alleged to have mistreated and abused Christian, and in mid- March 1912, an argument ensued between the two in which Belote accused Christian of stealing a locket and a skirt. Belote hit Christian with a cuspidor. The altercation escalated when Christian and Belote ran for two broom handles Belote used to prop up her bedroom windows. Christian grabbed one of the broom handles and struck Belote on the forehead. In an attempt to stifle Belote's screams, Christian stuffed a towel down Belote's throat, and the woman died by suffocation.

When Christian left the house, she stole Belote's purse with some money and a ring. One newspaper reported that police found Belote's body "laying face down in a pool of blood, and her head was horribly mutilated and a towel was stuffed into her mouth and throat."

Trial and execution

Police soon arrested Christian, and during questioning, she admitted to hitting Belote but was shocked that Belote was dead. Christian claimed she had no intent to kill Belote.

Her trial caused a violent courtroom outburst in Hillsville. Her lawyer sent a clemency petition to the governor of Virginia, explaining that he had refrained from calling her to testify in her defense out of concern that her words might incite another violent courtroom outburst.

With a lynch mob looming in the background, an Elizabeth City County Court tried and convicted Christian for murder and the trial judge sentenced her to death in the state's electric chair. One day after her 17th birthday in August 1912, a short five months after the crime, Virginia authorities executed Christian at the state penitentiary in Richmond.

Governor William Hodges Mann, who was also a Confederate veteran, declined to commute the death sentence, despite a plea from Virginia's mother, Charlotte Christian:

My dear mr governor

Please for give me for Bowing low to write you a few lines: I am the mother of Virginiany Christian. I have been pairalized for mor then three years and I could not and Look after Gennie as I wants too. I know she dun an aweful weaked thing when she kill Miss Belote and I hear that the people at the penetintry wants to kill her but I is praying night and day on my knees to God that he will soften your heart so that She may spend the rest of her days in prison. they say that the whole thing is in yours Hands and I know Governer if you will onely save my child who is little over sixteen years old God will Bless you for ever … If I was able to come to see you I could splain things to you better but I cant do nothing but pray to God and ask him to help you to simpithise with me and my truble

I am your most umble subgeck,

Charlotte Christian.

Virginia "Gennie" Christian was loved and supported by her family. All Christian's character witnesses described Gennie favourably and said that Belote was incredibly hard and cruel for no reason. Even Belote's own daughter and grandchildren loved Christian. Christian wrote to her family and supporters on the eve of her execution by the Commonwealth of Virginia, on August 16 1912:

I know that I am getting no more than I deserve. I am prepared to answer for my sins, and I believe that the Lord has forgiven me. I fear that Mrs. Belote may not have been Christian. I blame no one for my situation. I hope to meet Mrs. Belote in heaven. I thank all who have worked on my behalf.

After the governor declined this request, Christian took her seat in the electric chair, where she was electrocuted in the state prison in Richmond. She calmly met her fate at 7:23am. She was 17 years old. She was buried at the First Baptist Church cemetery in Hampton City.

See also

References

  1. Hartenstein, Meena (September 20, 2010). "First woman to be executed by Virginia in nearly 100 years". New York Daily News.
  2. ^ Baker, David (March 2008). "Black Female Executions in Historical Context" (PDF). Criminal Justice Review. 33 (1). Riverside, Ca: SAGE Publications / Georgia State University: 64–88. doi:10.1177/0734016808316782. ISSN 0734-0168. S2CID 144717701. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 16, 2011. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  3. Lundin, Leigh (September 26, 2010). "Virginia, Virginia". Capital Punishment. Criminal Brief.
  4. (Streib & Sametz, 1989, p. 25; see also Moten, 1997)
  5. ^ "New historical novel explores notorious 1912 execution". al.com. April 20, 2016. Retrieved January 30, 2025. Online I came across a 1912 petition for clemency sent to the governor of Virginia, where an attorney explained he had not called his client to the stand to testify in her own defense because he feared her words might provoke another outburst of courtroom violence as had happened in Hillsville. That attorney's client was Virginia Christian.
  6. Corroborated by Virginia Christian's own sisters, and descendants.
  7. Harris, Lashawn (2014). "The "Commonwealth of Virginia vs. Virginia Christian": Southern Black Women, Crime & Punishment in Progressive Era Virginia". Journal of Social History. 47 (4): 922–942. ISSN 0022-4529.
  8. "Virginia Christian to be Buried Today". Daily Press. Newport News, Virginia. August 18, 1912. p. 8. Retrieved January 31, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.

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