Shortly before being executed for the murder of Deputy John Murphy, Dennis Dilda was granted the opportunity to pose for a photograph with his wife and two children.
Shortly
before being executed for the murder of Deputy John Murphy, Dennis
Dilda was granted the opportunity to pose for a photograph with his wife
and two children. His final words before the execution were, "Goodbye,
boys!"
The Hanging of Dennis Dilda
In
September 1885, Dilda got a job helping to manage William Hamilton
Williscraft’s farm. The farmhouse came along with the job and Dilda and
his wife and children moved in. Williscraft went to live elsewhere but
kept one room in the farmhouse for himself. The room was always securely
locked and inside was a locked trunk.
Dilda
was supposed to have worked alongside the farm’s general caretaker,
“General Grant” Jenkins. By December, however, Jenkins had disappeared,
and Williscraft noticed the lock had been pried off the door of his
reserved room, the trunk had been opened and a gold watch and two
pistols were missing. Dilda told his boss that his coworker had hated
the job and complained all the time, and one morning he simply left. He
denied knowing anything about the theft and suggested Jenkins had done
it.
Williscraft, however, knew and trusted
Jenkins, who had worked for him for twenty years. He didn’t believe his
faithful employee would have stolen from him and then left without
giving notice.
So he rode to town and swore out a warrant with the Yavapai County Sheriff, William J. Mulvenon, charging Dilda with the theft.
Deputy
Sheriff John W. Murphy went to serve the warrant, stopping at rancher
Charley Behm’s house on the way. He went to Dilda’s house several times
on December 20, but each time Georgia Dilda told him her husband was out
hunting.
Murphy borrowed Behm’s needle gun and
tried one more time after dark. The sky was clear and there was full
moon. Again, Dilda’s wife said he wasn’t home. In fact, he was hiding
behind a fence, armed and waiting for his quarry, something Georgia was
well aware of. When Murphy started to leave, Dilda shot him in the back.
The deputy sheriff was able to fire the needle gun once before he
collapsed and bled to death. Dennis and Georgia Dilda dragged his body
inside the farmhouse and down into the cellar, and Dilda buried it
there.
The next day, alarmed that Murphy hadn’t
returned, Williscraft went to the farmhouse himself and found Murphy’s
horse tied up just twenty feet from the house, and pools of blood in
that yard. He gathered a posse of men, but Dilda had already left on
foot and he was armed to the teeth, with Behm’s needle gun, his own .30
caliber Remington rifle, and Murphy’s .44 caliber revolver and cartridge
belt.
Searchers
found the corpse of “General Grant” Jenkins buried in the garden,
concealed beneath a bed of replanted sunflowers. He had been shot in the
head and had been dead for weeks. The searchers found Murphy’s body a
short time afterwards.
A search party went
looking for the fugitive and found him two days later, asleep under a
tree. He did not resist when Sheriff Mulvenon arrested him. “You know it
would be natural for a man in my position, if he could tell anything
that would benefit him, he would do so,” Dilda replied simply when
pressed for a confession. “But I have nothing to say.”
Dilda’s
last night on earth, Wilson notes, “was restless, as he would doze only
to awaken suddenly with a startled scream.” In the morning they took
him to his favorite Chinese restaurant for breakfast and he ate
heartily. At eleven o’clock, Dilda had one final photograph taken with
his wife and two small children, Fern and John.
The hanging was at 2:00 p.m.
While Dilda was standing on the scaffold, Sheriff Mulvenon asked, “Is there anything you want?”
“A drink,” Dilda replied. Mulvenon let him take a long draw from a bottle of whiskey.
Some
eight hundred men, as well as a dozen women, watched the hanging. Dilda
went to his death quietly. The only commotion came from the audience: a
reporter sent to cover the execution fainted as the trap was sprung.
The condemned man’s last words were, “Goodbye, boys!”
Georgia
Dilda did not face charges for her role in Deputy Sheriff Murphy’s
death. She returned to her family in Phoenix after the execution and
never bothered to send for her husband’s body.


No comments:
Post a Comment