Here is an interesting story of one of our relatives, Dr.
William D. "Will" or "Willie" Vinson.
Will was born in the Lickskillet section of Cherokee County
in 1860. He became a dentist. He married a redhead, Katie Tribble. They had two sons. Katie died of tuberculosis on March 1, 1898.
Will married their housekeeper, widowed Jennie Clark
Hogan.
One story by Doctor Vinson's granddaughter handed down this
story: At some point after Will and
Jennie's marriage she sent him out to draw water from the well. It was getting dark. A fog was settling in, and while he was there
it descended into the yard and took the shape of Will's ex-wife Katie's face
and hovered over a fence post. Willie
stood there just staring at it Jennie came out and saw the image too and
fainted.
Jennie and Willie's marriage did not last very long. Their divorced was final on Dec 3, 1900.
In 1903 William Dean Vinson married a third time Cora Lou
Jackson Tallent, a divorcee with one daughter.
The doctor and Cora had two daughters and one son together. The couple often quarreled and separated
several times. The doctor took steps to
procure a divorce from Cora but she refused, afraid she would get nothing.
On March 30, 1922, Cora hired a taxi to take her to Will's
office on Marietta Street, in Atlanta.
She walked into the waiting room
passed the patients, went to the doctor's office where he was bent over writing
a prescription, she called his name and when he looked up she shot him right in
the eye. She emptied the chambered
shooting him in the head and throat. She
walked back out through the waiting room, passed the patients, and got back into the waiting
cab. She was immediately apprehended.
She was found guilty of murder , sentenced to die but was
not executed. A second trial commuted her
sentence t life imprisonment, where she grew bitter and not the least bit
resentful. She made it known when she
was released she was going to shoot Willie and Tillie, her stepsons.
Willie carried a pistol where he went until he died in 1945.
Cora lived on until 1953, having been pardoned some twenty
years earlier. She lived in Atlanta with
her daughter.
The story was sent to me by relative and articulate detailed researcher F. Tucker of South Carolina.
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