The main heading in this Pittsburgh newspaper from July 1921 has
a vague connection with Bible Student history. Admittedly very vague. The featured
murdered lawyer was Charles Taze Russell’s brother-in-law.
When Maria Frances Ackley married Charles Taze
Russell at her mother’s residence on March 13, 1879 (the service being
conducted by John H Paton) her younger brother, Lemuel Mahlon Ackley, was
likely one of the guests. He was born in Allegheny in 1857 and is found in the
census returns there for 1870 and 1880.
He started his working life as a local
reporter, but then went to law school in Michigan before moving to Chicago in
1887, where he spent the rest of his life.
When Maria left Charles Taze in 1897 she went
first to stay with Lemuel in Chicago.
Lemuel turns up in Chicago papers over the
years including his own messy divorce proceedings. His estranged wife accused
him of only paying limited support in potatoes and increments of 10 cents at a
time, and he accused her of assaulting him with a rolling pin. The same account from the Chicago Tribune for 18 March 1909
had him accused of kidnapping his five year old son when his sister, Mrs Amy
Russell took him to visit relatives in Pittsburgh. Amy Russell can only be a
newspaper blooper for Maria. Lemuel was sentenced to fifteen days in jail on
that occasion for contempt of court. All good tabloid material.
Another story involved a property dispute on behalf of another of Lemuel’s
sisters, Selena Barto. It was claimed that she’d allowed tax payments to lapse
on a property she owned in 1907. A policeman named Kellogg with an eye to the
main chance bought up the debt and claimed ownership. It rumbled on and off for
fourteen years and in the last few days it was claimed that shots were fired.
It became that sort of dispute. Lemuel fought on Selena’s behalf and got
Kellogg in court where the judge found in Lemuel’s favour and sentenced Kellogg
to two weeks in jail with a fine on top.
Standing there in his full policeman’s uniform
complete with pistol and holster, Kellogg drew and fired at the judge. He
missed the judge, but fatally wounded Lemuel, before turning the gun on
himself.
It was such a good story for the Chicago
papers that they ran a picture strip story of events.
Lemuel’s photograph is found above. It is of
him as a younger man, and can also be found in the volume Chicago Biography
c.1891.
Kellogg was able to commit suicide in prison by poison on 20 February 1922.
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