This Day in History : [ 10 / Mar ]

Montana vigilantes hang Jack Slade

Local hell-raiser Jack Slade is hanged in one of the more troubling incidents of frontier vigilantism.Slade stood out even among the many rabble-rousers who inhabited the wild frontier-mining town of Virginia City Montana.When he was sober townspeople liked and respected Slade though there were unconfirmed rumors he had once been a thief and murderer.When drunk however Slade had a habit of firing his guns in bars and making idle threats.

Though Slades rowdiness did not injure anyone Virginia City leaders anxious to create a more peaceable community began to lose patience.They began giving more weight to the claims that he was a potentially dangerous man.The year before many of Virginia Citys leading citizens had formed a semisecret vigilance committee to combat the depredations of a road agent named Henry Plummer.Plummer and his gang had robbed and killed in the area confident that the meager law enforcement in the region could not stop them.

Determined to reassert order the Virginia City vigilantes began capturing and hanging the men in Plummers gang.As a warning to other criminals the vigilantes left a scrap of paper on the hanged corpses with the cryptic numbers 3-7-77.The meaning of the numbers is unclear though some claim it referred to the dimensions of a grave 3 feet wide 7 feet long 77 inches deep.In the first two months of 1864 the Montana vigilantes hanged 24 men including Plummer.

Most historians agree that these hangings while technically illegal punished only genuinely guilty men.However the vigilantes decision to hang Jack Slade seems less justified.Finally fed up with his drunken rampages and wild threats on this day in 1864 a group of vigilantes took Slade into custody and told him he would be hanged.

Slade who had committed no serious crime in Virginia City pleaded for his life or at least a chance to say goodbye to his beloved wife.Before Slades wife arrived the vigilantes hanged him.Not long after the questionable execution of Slade legitimate courts and prisons began to function in Virginia City.Though sporadic vigilante justice continued until 1867 it increasingly attracted public concern.

In March 1867 miners in one Montana mining district posted a notice in the local newspaper that they would hang five vigilantes for every one man hanged by vigilantes.Thereafter vigilante action faded away.