cover image Goat Castle: A True Story of Murder, Race, and the Gothic South

Goat Castle: A True Story of Murder, Race, and the Gothic South

Karen L. Cox. Univ. of North Carolina, $26 (240p) ISBN 978-1-4696-3503-3

Historian Cox (Dreaming of Dixie) provides a definitive look at the 1932 murder of Jennie Merrill after a botched robbery of her estate in Natchez, Miss., which garnered national headlines and even sparked a morbid boom in tourism for the city. Merrill was gunned down by Lawrence Williams, an African-American man who was subsequently shot and killed by police before he could be officially charged for the crime. Cox argues there’s sufficient evidence proving Williams was recruited to commit the theft by Dick Dana and Octavia Dockery, the victim’s eccentric neighbors, who were seen conversing with Williams on the day of the crime. Dana and Dockery lived in a decaying mansion that was overrun by goats and other livestock, and they had the motive to commit the theft, Cox explains: they were resentful of Merrill’s affluence and had a long-standing feud with her over animals trespassing onto her property. Still, they were never officially charged. Instead Dana and Dockery turned their notoriety into profit, charging reporters, and later tourists, a fee to tour the grounds of “Goat Castle.” The only person convicted of the crime was Williams’s girlfriend, Emily Burns—by all accounts an innocent bystander. Through an exhaustive examination of archival records, Cox makes clear that Burns was forced into confessing that she was involved with the plot and shows that she was a victim of racism. Cox fulfills her intention to “provide a window... onto southern race relations, Jim Crow, and the narrative of southern civilization in decline.” [em](Oct.) [/em]