Quill, Ink, DocumentTurnbo Manuscript

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The following story, sent to me by Linda Sheehan, relates the
incidents surrounding the murder of James Madison Hoodenpyl.
 
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BARBAROUS AND CRUEL

BulletBy Silas Claiborne Turnbo
          1844 - 1925

"On the north bank of White River in Keesee township, Marion County, Arkansas, is situated the old
Mat Hoodenpile farm.  At the back of the field is a sloo.  Between this sloo or ravine and the river is a narrow
strip of land called an island which the Protem and Lead Hill wagon road crosses in reaching the Bradley’s Ferry
landing when the river is past fording or the Fish Trap shoals ford when the water is low.  On the opposite side of the
river from the Hoodenpile place is a high bluff. This land finally belonged to John D. Ackinson who died here on
Christmas day, 1902, and is buried in the cemetery at Lead Hill.  This land is an old settled farm but as we
have made
reference to this bottom in another sketch we will not repeat it here.  In the course of time this land fell into the hands
of Jimmie Jones, the father of Doctor Peter Jones and son of Sugar Jones, and Mat Hoodenpile and Sally Hoodenpile,
his wife,
bought this land of Jones’.  Mat Hoodenpile was born in 1809.  His wife was born
September 13, 1813.  They were
both born and reared in the eastern part of Tennessee near the Cumberland Mountains and were married near the
neighborhood where they were raised.  Mrs. Hoodenpile was a daughter of John Briggs and she had three sisters, their
names of which were Ruthy, who married Marlin Herd, father of John Herd, and Mahala, who
married Allen Phelps.
The other sister was named Polly.  Mrs. Hoodenpile also had a brother named Andy Briggs.  Steve Briggs, a close
relative, was a Methodist preacher and lived on Sugar Loaf Creek below Lead Hill.  John Briggs was a well to do man
and was a slave holder and gave each one of his children a negro.  The one he gave Mrs. Hoodenpile was a girl named Easter.
The one he gave to Ruthy was named Susie.  The one he gave to Polly was a negro boy named Mose.  Hoodenpile and his
wife gave their negro to Jimmie Jones for this land consideration 8500.  I do not know exactly when they moved to this
bottom but it was in the latter part of 1851 or early part of 1852.  When they moved here they built a double houses of
hewed logs with small room between them and stick and dirt chimney at each end of the house and porch on north side.
This building stood on the point of the hill just above the bottom and only a short distance west of a small hollow where
there is a little spring of water.  They had three children., the names of which were Peter., who married Miss Malissa Owen,
daughter of Christian Owen, who lived in the edge of the Sugar Loaf Prairie, and Mary, who married Dave Forest and
died in Ozark County, Missouri, in 1875, and Sarah Jane, who was not married at the time we speak of but was afterward
married to John Murphy and they went to Texas where they separated and she rode horseback all the way from Texas to
Marion County, Arkansas, alone, where in 1869 she married Dick Rosenberry and they moved to Killgore, Newton
County, Arkansas.  At the breaking out of the Civil War Peter Hooden-rile and his wife lived in a log house on the east
side of the hollow just mentioned and used water out of the same spring his parents did.  They had two children—a boy and
a girl— the former was named Phillip and the latter was named Sarah Catherine.  My memory of the Hoodenpiles in war
times is sad and pathetic. Peter Hoodenpile enlisted in the southern army—Wm. C. Mitchell’s company, 14th regiment,
Arkansas infantry, but was at home on leave of absence when the awful scenes
occurred that we are about to relate.
Mat Hoodenpile, his father, was a union man, but he was too old to take a Part in the war and remained at home and did
not molest any body. On the 5th day of May, 1862, he
was shot and wounded in his field while replanting corn. The
assassin had concealed himself just on the outside
of the fence near the sloo bank and shot at his victim 77 paces
the bullet taking effect in the left shoulder. Though severely wounded yet he made his way to the house where his
beloved wife dressed his wounds and cared for him. On the 12th of May or one week from the time he was wounded
a band of assassins fired on Peter, his son, and was struck by three bullets. The attack
occurred on the east side of a
trail that lead down the point of the hill to his father’s house and only a short distance from the house.  Peter had been out
stock hunting and was mounted on a small iron gray mare.  The man was armed with a Mississippi rifle and a navy
revolver—the
same he carried in the army, but the assassins got the drop on him for they were so well concealed that
he was in a few yards of them without seeing them and they opened fire on him. Strange to say
there were five of the
murderers but they never killed him.  They were to his left and one ball struck him on the right nipple and it ranged into
his arm below the shoulder, another ball glanced the top of his head and fractured the skull bone. A third ball cut Into
his side and passed out.  It seems that three of them intended to kill him and the other two intended to kill his mare.
One of the-shots from the guns of these last two hit the fleshy part of the mare’s hip and the ball from the other man’s gun
cut the bridle rein partly in twain below the mare’s neck.  At the report of the guns the mare plunged forward and galloped
down the hill to his father’s yard gate without the rider falling off and more than that he held to his rifle and revolver and
the mare in running leaped over a big log that lay just above the wood yard. The mare in leaping this log cleared 21 feet.
His wife and children were at his father’s house and as the wounded mare galloped up to the yard gate with the desperately
wounded man his grief stricken wife and mother met him at the gate and lifted him from the saddle and carried him
into the house.  Elijah Barnes, a very old man, lived in a small cabin between the grave yard and the river bank.  Barnes
children were named John, Sam, Joe, Viney, Mary and Rosa, and as it happened Sam Barnes,
who was a little boy, was
at Hoodenpile’s when Peter was waylaid and shot and the family sent young Barnes for the writer where I was living at
my father’s house on the river two miles below the Hooden-pile homestead. When I arrived there Peter was suffering very
bad from his wounds and his clothing was covered with blood
and the family was almost distracted with grief.  They
requested me to go after the doctor who lived at the village of Dubuque on the river two miles below Elbow Shoals.  I mounted
one of their mules bareback and as the river was fordable I crossed it at the Fish Trap Shoals and hurried through the
woods a nearer Way and crossed the river again at the mouth of East Sugar Loaf Creek and hurried on up the river to
opposite Dubuque and recrossed the river and saw the doctor, but he refused to visit the wounded man for fear they
(assassins) might kill him. Then I hurried to the residence of Doctor Hedley’s who lived in the Sugar Loaf Prairie and he
refused to go too.  I could do nothing more now but go back and tell the sadly afflicted family of my ill success.  It seemed
nearly impossible for the man to live but he did and lay suffering intensely until the night of the 26 or two weeks after he was
shot when a party of armed men came to the yard fence and called for Mat Hoodenpile who though was feeble from his wound
went to the door in spite of the entreaties of his wife and was shot down and expired in a few minutes and while his lifeless
and bleeding form lay stretched on the floor the murderers entered the dwelling and threatened to finish Peter’s life ‘where
he lay in the bed in the same house where his dead father lay on the floor.  The man was suffering intensely and believing
he had only a few more hours to live they at last desisted.  The only person pre-sent except the family and the murderers
that night was
Miss Bettie Owen, a sister of Peter’s wife.  No one can imagine the horrifying scenes agony and distress
of this unfortunate family during that dark dismal night.  Mrs. Hoodenpile and Malissa, Peter’s wife, and Miss Bettie
Owen had put a straw bed down on the floor and lifted
the dead form up from the floor and placed it on the straw bed where it
rested until they sent for the writer and the boy Sam Barnes.  When we arrived a great pool of blood lay on the floor and
the bloody corpse lay on the straw bed.  I and young Barnes shaved the murdered man and dressed him the best we could then
we went to the grave yard on what is now the
John Riddle farm and dug a grave while a few others prepared a rough coffin
and we buried him late in the after-noon.  Peter Hoodenpile’s condition by this time was growing much worse.  The wound
in the head was producing spasms and the other
wounds were badly inflamed and setting up blood poison.  He must have
medical attendance if it could be had and I started after the same doctor again at Dubuque.  The river was past fording now
and after I had rode to the upper end of the Billy Holt farm, I followed the trail that lead along the foot of the bluff that the
settlers had dug out for horsemen.  Then up through the Jake Nave Bend to the opposite side of the river from Dubuque.  The
doctor’s name was Pete Jones and his office was in a little white house at the base of the
hill and seeing John Oldham
standing on the bank of the river at the village I called to him to go tell the doctor to come to the canoe landing as I desired to
talk to him and he and the doctor got there in a few minutes and I explained to him the condition that Peter Hoodenpile was
in and begged him to go
see him and he consented to go.  Mr. Oldham assisted him to swim his horse across the river by
the side of the canoe and we started back.  Knowing that the assassins would waylay the trail for the doctor and my-self we
made a large circuit and avoided them for it actually turned out that they did waylay us at the extreme upper end of the Billy
Holt farm and by surrounding the trail and traveling through the woods we escaped them
.  When the doctor arrived he
raised the pieces of skull off of the brain of the suffering man
and the spasms ceased, then he cleansed and dressed the
other wounds and relieved him greatly of his suffering.  The foul crimp, aroused the sympathy of a large number of people
who lived in the Sugar Loaf country south of White River and about 20 men collected at the Hoodenpile residence and the
writer and them guarded the house day and night until the wounded man had recovered sufficiently to be removed to safe
quarters on the Jack Hurst farm on Crooked Creek below Yellville where he remained until he was able to travel and he
and wife went to southwest Arkansas.  One day
in September, 1863, while the regiment the writer belonged to was
camped in a canebrake on the Washita River below Arkadelphia, Peter Hoodenpile came to see me from where he lived
about 60 miles.  Soon after this he and wife went to Texas ‘where three more children were born to them, the names
of which were Frank, Belle, and Bettie.  Then his wife died and Peter himself died June 7, 1873.  All of their children
come back to Marion County except Phillip.  Bettie died in the latter part of December, 1877.  Sally Hoodenpile, her
grand-mother, died January 8, 1878.  They both lie buried in the graveyard on the John Riddle farm where Mat Hoodenpile
was buried.  Sarah Catherine, daughter of Peter Hoodenpile, married Green Pratt and she died near Western Grove,
Arkansas.  The other two children, Frank and Belle, were living near Western Grove the last account I had of them."
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Now we have the full story in regard to the death of James Madison Hoodenpyl!
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The Silas Claiborne Turnbo Manuscripts are in the Springfield-Greene County Library in
Springfield, MO., prepared for electronic publication by MICRO INNOVATIONS, INC., Nixa, MO.

BulletOther stories by S. C. Turnbo in regard to the Marion County, Arkansas area
can be viewed at the following URL:

Click Here For TheTurnbo Manuscripts In Their Entirety 

Go there and type in Hoodenpile.  It will bring up twelve entries.Blue Bar


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