Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Mr. Taulbee and Mr. Kincaid

William P. Taulbee was born in Morgan County, Kentucky – about 80 miles east of Lexington up in the mountains – on October 22, 1851. Tutored by his father while also attending “public school” as it existed in rural Kentucky in the 1850s, Taulbee was ordained for the ministry in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. John Wesley, who founded Methodism, hated the idea of slavery. When the Methodist Episcopal Church [MEC] met in Baltimore in December 1784, they officially opposed slavery, carrying on Wesley’s wishes.

That said, Methodists and Baptists softened their stance on slavery in the 19th century in an effort to appeal to Southern parishioners, saying that the Bible did, in fact, acknowledge the role of slavery in society, but that slaveowners should treat their slaves better. In 1840 James Osgood Andrew, a Methodist bishop in Oxford, Georgia bought a slave. Later that year the MEC chose not to expel Bishop Andrew from its ranks. In 1844 Andrew’s new bride owned an enslaved person inherited from her mother. Now Bishop Andrew owned two enslaved people, drawing criticism from the northern members of the MEC. This time, however, the General Conference decided to suspend the Bishop until he gave up the enslaved persons living with him. Mirroring a debate that was swirling around the country in general in the mid-19th century, Southern delegates weren’t so sure that the General Conference had the authority to discipline bishops in such a manner. They split, and formed the MEC South [MEC, S]. This was the version of the denomination in which William Taulbee was raised, and preached, earning him the nickname of the “Mountain Orator.”

After shoveling coal and teaching school, Taulbee studied law, winning the clerk seat in the Magoffin County Court in 1878, just a little bit further southeast than Morgan County, moonlighting as a preacher in the MEC,S. Re-elected as county clerk in 1882, Taulbee ran as a Democrat and won a seat in the House of Representatives in 1884 and was re-elected again in 1886. Taulbee’s political future was all but secured. But whispers and rumors soon surrounded him. As Robert S. Pohl noted, the Catlettsburg (KY) Democrat predicted, “We will now say in print what we have predicted to various gentlemen in private, that Pres. Taulbee, should he live, will be governor of Kentucky inside of ten years.” Referring to him as “Pres” is notable, as is the “should he live” qualifier. Why would his life be cut short at such a young age? The Maysfield (KY) Daily Bulletin noted that a recent speech of Taulbee’s had been attended by a crowd “largely composed of ladies.”

Taulbee’s personal life became of note to a journalist with the Louisville Times named Charles Kincaid. Kincaid, who like Taulbee had studied law, had been writing articles saying that Taulbee was personally profiting from his service in Congress. But Kincaid dropped a bomb in December 1887 when he accused the “Silver-Tongued Taulbee” of being “caught in a most compromising position” in the top-floor model room at the Patent Office” with a “Brown-Haired Miss Dodge.” Taulbee grew bolder, according to Kincaid, “Not content with caressing in this place, the Congressman was seen by the old watchman to kiss his sweetheart on the stairway one day: a parting salute, as it were. It smacked like a cow pulling her hoof out of the mud.”

Miss Laura Louisa Dodge was “a little beauty,” Kincaid wrote, “bright as a sunbeam and saucy as a bowl of jelly. She is petite of figure, but plump as a partridge,” with “cheeks like peaches, lips like rosebuds tipped with dew.” And Taulbee got Miss Dodge appointed to her position in the Patent Office, on her appointment she said she was from Kentucky. She wasn’t – she was from Massachusetts and lived with her parents. She also wasn’t yet 18 years old, just a little older than Taulbee’s marriage to Lou Emma Oney Taulbee, with whom they had five children. Laura Dodge moved to the Pension Office, eliminating any conflict with the Patent Office. Kincaid called for Taulbee’s removal, but the story did not find its way into the Washington Post.

Despite buying a house in Washington, Taulbee did not run for re-election in 1888 and went into lobbying, as one does when your political career is basically over. Taulbee selected his successor to run as a Democrat for his seat, but he – as did most of the Democratic Party in 1888 – lost.

Taulbee endured yet another black eye in 1889. The House of Representatives had its own bank, known creatively as the House Bank. Their salaries would get deposited into an account for each representative, who could then write a check to draw against their salary. Over time the House Bank expanded its financial services to include check cashing, wire transfers, deposits from other representatives, and also allowed “check-cashing and other services for House aides and journalists.” Of course some representatives overdrew their accounts, but did so without a penalty though they weren’t allowed to write checks against future salary deposits.

Anyhow, in 1889 a House Bank cashier deliciously named Craven Silcott took off with $75,000 (over $2.2 million today) of deposits and also with a French-Canadian prostitute named Herminie Thiebault but whose street name was Lulu Barrett. They were briefly spotted at Thiebault’s sister’s house in Montreal but escaped again, never to be found again. Members of the House of Representatives who were not affected by Silcott’s theft rejected the idea of reimbursing those affected, but when the Court of Claims reimbursed one member, Congress paid everybody back. Taulbee was one of the ones affected, though because he wasn’t a current member of the House of Representatives, it was uncertain whether or not he would be reimbursed.

Where Taulbee was, well, tall, Kincaid was the exact opposite – a foot shorter than Taulbee, barely 100 pounds, and quite a sickly man. As Taulbee was a Washington lobbyist from Kentucky, and Kincaid was the Washington correspondent for the Louisville Times, they often met, with Taulbee taking pleasure in pulling Kincaid’s nose or ears. Extremely disrespectful, to be honest. Kentucky State Historian James Klotter noted that this was a deliberate disrespect – Taulbee didn’t view Kincaid as someone worth fighting. He occasionally mentioned that he might kill Kincaid.

On the morning of February 28, 1890, tensions between the two Kentuckians had reached a boiling point. The House was due to go into session at 11:30am and the lobbyist and the journalist met each other – coincidentally, apparently – outside the chamber doors. The two exchanged insults, Taulbee allegedly wanted to talk with Kincaid, which Kincaid didn’t want to do. Taulbee, most first-hand accounts agree (again, according to Pohl), said something along the lines of “I wish to see you.” Kincaid said he couldn’t, since he was waiting for a gentleman,” which, you gotta hand it to him, is a pretty good burn.

Taulbee grabbed Kincaid by the lapel of his jacket, possibly also tweaking Kincaid’s nose again. This time the Washington Post did pick up on a Taulbee story. Kincaid, again the physical inferior between the two, said “I am in no condition for a physical contest with you – I am a small man, and not armed.” Taulbee replied, “Then you had better be armed.” Kincaid went home.

At 1:30pm Taulbee was coming down the stairs outside the House chamber with a friend to go to lunch. The stairs were in a Y shape – two staircases from the second floor to the landing, and a single staircase to the first floor. As Taulbee descended a voice from the other staircase said, “Can you see me now?” Taulbee turned, the friend took off. Kincaid had gone home to get his pistol, and shot Taulbee in the face.

Taulbee stumbled around, making his way a few steps below, before some of his friends caught him and eventually took Taublee to nearby Providence Hospital. As Capitol Police officers approached Kincaid, he simply said, “I did it – I am the man who did the shooting.” They turned him over to the Metropolitan Police Department.

Initially it was thought that, though Kincaid’s bullet struck Taulbee below the eye and settled in the back of his skull, it was a non-fatal wound. Kincaid was informed that, though he would be set free with a $2,000 bond, he could be rearrested if Taulbee died. Taulbee seemed to be doing okay, he told his brother what happened: yeah, he grabbed Kincaid; yeah, he probably pulled his ear; but under no circumstances did he pull Kincaid’s nose. On March 4 – four days after the shooting – Dr. John W. Bayne went home for the night, apparently happy with Taulbee’s condition enough to go home and sleep.

Still, doctors could not locate the bullet. On March 5 it was assumed that Taulbee would die, which he did early on the morning of March 11. The bullet had formed an abscess between Taulbee’s brain and skull, paralyzing him until he died.

Kincaid was rearrested. He asked to sleep another hour, this request was denied, though the stressed-out Kincaid was allowed to have his own cell. On March 15 – four days after Taulbee’s death and the day after his funeral – Kincaid, unable to stand on his own, was indicted by a grand jury. Over a month later, he was able to post the $20,000 bail and walked out, awaiting trial.

Kincaid’s defense team was an odd one, led by Indiana Senator Daniel Voorhees. Voorhees was a devout Democrat – from the same party as Taulbee, his neighbor to the south. That said, Voorhess was well-liked by Republican members from across the branches of government, noted for his kind-heartedness and amiability…on a personal level, if not a political one.

The trial – delayed for almost a year to allow Congress time to finish its business and recess - centered around Taulbee’s bullying of Kincaid, noting the number of times Taulbee threw Kincaid across a hallway, or against an iron railing; or when riding an elevator together, Taulbee tried to crush Kincaid’s toes with the heel of his boot. Eight current and former congressmen testified on Kincaid’s behalf. Kincaid eventually took the stand in his own defense, testifying under oath that the 11:30am “meeting” between he and Taulbee ended with Taulbee’s threat, “You damned little coward and monkey, now go and arm yourself.”

The jury was adjourned for deliberations on April 8, 1891. That evening they returned a not-guilty verdict for the reasons of self-defense. Kincaid went back to Kentucky to be a reporter for the Cincinnati Enquirer, and died 15 years later at the age of 51, three years after Taulbee’s widow passed away, buried next to her husband. Miss Dodge married a Pension Office official named William Paul ten years after Taulbee’s death. When Paul died in 1927 she married attorney Tracy L. Jeffords, a former assistant U.S. attorney. Jeffords died in 1949, his obituary noting his devotion as a Sunday School teacher at the Francis Asbury Methodist Church. His widow, Laura Louisa Dodge Paul Jeffords, passed away at the age of 89, on December 25, 1959.

 

Taulbee's bloodstains can still be seen in the Capitol building.