On November 17, 1958, the Kingston Trio hist #1 on the Billboard charts with the song "Tom Dooley." Bob Dylan and Joan Baez may have gotten their political and musical inspiration from folk music legends Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie, but their commercial appeal can be traced to the success of the Kingston Trio. With their clean-cut looks, smiling faces and winsome harmonies coupled with banjo strumming, the Trio put a non-threatening face on the folk music culture of the 1950s, and brought the music into mainstream America.
Their most popular song, "Tom Dooley" has one of the most interesting and sinister back stories of any American popular song.
The trial was held in Statesville, about
thirty miles from Wilksboro, Judge Ralph Burton presiding. Most of the evidence
was circumstantial.
Their most popular song, "Tom Dooley" has one of the most interesting and sinister back stories of any American popular song.
Tom
Dula: The Murder of Laura Foster, and the Birth of a Legend
Victims: 1
Happy Valley sits on the Yadkin River in
Wilkes County, North Carolina. Tom Dula was a happy-go-lucky man with many lady admirers,
in particular cousins Laura and Anne Foster.. Even though both girls were
sought after by several other men, they both had a special fondness for Tom. He
was so unlike all the other men. He was happy, and fun, always singing and
playing his banjo. He played for the local square dances and was a very popular
young man with the ladies around the community.
But he also had a cruel side. Most men
remembered him as “quite a mean individual.” He was also considered a
“womanizer of a very low level.”
Laura and Ann Foster were not genteel
southern bells from polite society. They were country farm girls. Ann's mother,
Lottie Foster, discovered Tom and Ann in bed together when they were just
fourteen years old. Both women had a reputation of being loose with their
bodies who would have sex with anyone. Ann was also considered “mean as hell”
by the locals. Today, they would be called white trash.
March
1862. Like most of the men in the south, Tom joined the Confederate cause
when he was seventeen years old. As a private, he served as regiment musician
and soldier. He served under Colonel Zebulon B. Vance, a former governor of
North Carolina, and saw action at Morehead City and the battle of Swift Creek
in February 1864.
March
10,1864. Tom was captured and taken to Point Lookout, Maryland as a
prisoner of war. He returned home after the Civil War, the survivior of many
brutal battles and harsh treatment, but his war heroism was second to his real
claim to fame - music. Just as he had entertained the people of Happy Valley with
his music, Tom had often entertained his Confederate comrades-in-arms around
the campfire with his banjo-playing and singing. It gave them a few moments of
joy between long marches and bloody battles.
June
10, 1865. Tom signed the oath of allegiance and returned to Happy Valley.
He discovered that during ihs absence Ann had married James Melton, so Tom
began to woo Laura, even though she had several other suitors. Bob Grayson, a local
school teacher, was totally smitten with Laura and wanted her for his wife.
Laura and Tom met secretly at night. However, Tom was also seeing the married
Ann Melton on the sly. Ann had discovered that, marriage or not, her passion
for Dula had not waned at all, so the two cousins, shared Dula as their lover.
Tom finally proposed to Laura and she
accepted. They planned an elopement.
Friday, May
24, 1866. That evening, Laura packed
a few clothes and snuck out of her family's house, hopped on her old horse,
Belle, and rode off quietly into the night to rendezvous with Tom Dula. She was
never seen again.
Most locals initally suspected Laura had
eloped with Dula, but the family organize search parties were formed, but to no
avail. Three weeks after Laura's disappearance, Belle was discovered tied to a
tree in a hidden copse of thick brush. The soil
around was disturbed with horse tracks. By this time, most people thought
Laura's body had been dumped in
theYadkin River.
Months later, Ann's relationship with the third Foster sister, Perline, was on edge. Ann had always been critical of her younger
sister, but lately the criticism had become more pointed.
Perline told Ann, “You better be careful, or
I'll tell what I know about Laura.”
“You wouldn't dare,” Ann retorted. “You're
as deep in the mud as I am in the mire.”
Soon the authorities were suspicious of the
women's behavior, sure that the women had information about Laura's
disappearance. They were taken in for questioning. Perline broke down and
shouted, “Tom Dula killed Laura! And Ann has taken me to the grave!”
Perline told them where Laura's body was
buried. The search party, led by Bob Grayson, began their grim task of looking
for Laura's grave. When James Isbell's horse became nervous and shied away from
an area of loose dirt the men started digging and unearthed the body of
Laura Foster. Her legs had been
broken and there was large wound was found
in her breast. They also found a small bag of Laura's clothing and one
other thing - Bob Grayson found a lady's
handkerchief which he claimed did not
belong to Laura.
Laura's body was brought home and she was
buried on a high hill known ever since as "Laura Foster Hill".
The handkerchief was identified as belonging
Ann Melton. She was arrested as an accomplice in the murder of Laura
Foster. As she was led away she shouted, “They'll never put a rope around this pretty neck!”
However, Bob Grayson would not be satisfied
until he had the true murderer of his love - Tom Dula,
July
1866. A man walked onto the farm of Lt. Col. James W. M. Grayson near
Trade, Tennessee. He said his name was Tom Hall from Wilkes County and that he
wanted to work just long enough to earn money for a new pair of boots. His were
falling apart. Grayson put Tom to work as a hired hand and by July 10, Tom had
his new boots and was gone.
Later that afternoon the posse fromWilkes
County arrived at Colonel Grayson's farm, led by Bob Grayson, no relation. They told the colonel they werelooking for a
man named Tom Dula. From their description of the man, the colonel knew they
were looking for his hired man, Tom Hall. The colonel joined with the posse to search
for Dula. Nine miles west of Taylorsville (now Mountain City) a place called
Pandora they fuond Dula sitting on a rock in the creek soaking his feet. His
new boots had rubbed blisters. The colonel dismounted and told Tom he was under arrest, but when
members of the posse began to discuss hanging Tom then and there, the colonel pulled out his gun. He told the
posse that Tom was going to get a fair trial. Tom insisted that he was not
guilty.
Three weeks after Laura's body had been
found, the posse rode into town. Colonel Grayson was in the lead followed by
Tom Dula with his hands shackled behind his back.
A crowd had gathered. Dula, unconcerned
as he always was, asked that he be un-shackeled and so he could play a little
tune on his banjo for the crowd. He was incarcerated by A. T. Ferguson
and quickly joined by Ann Foster Milton in an adjoining cell.
Colonel Zebulon Vance, Tom's former commander
and governor, agreed to defend Tom. He negotiated a change of venue because the
local people were so passionate against Tom and several continuances. It wasn't
until the spring of 1868 that tom went on trial for the murder of Laura
Foster.
Evidence was introduced that Tom Dula and
Ann Foster Milton were having an affair, “criminal intercourse” the court
record called it. Tom had contracted syphilis, possibly from either Laura or
Ann. Several locals testified that Tom was so outraged about the disease that several
times he threatened to “put through” whoever had given him the infection.
Bob Grayson brought Betsey Scott as a
witness and she testified that she had talked to Laura Foster the day
before she disappeared. Laura claimed she was going to “the Bates place” to
meet Dula. On Thursday Tom had borrowed a mattock - a shovel - from Ann's
mother . He was seen Thursday afternoon near the Bate's place. Ann was also
seen leaving town on Thursday and wasn't seen again until Friday morning. When
she arrived home her dress and shoes were wet and muddy.
The prosecution claimed that Tom's motive
for murder was his anger at contracting a venereal disease; Ann's motive was
her jealously of Tom and Laura's impending marriage. Other's claimed that
Laura's murder was done out of mercy. There was no cure for syphilis in the
19th century and victims faced an agonizing death, so Tom killed her so she
would not have to endure the approaching suffering.
During the defense Tom insisted he was
innocent, but Vance could not get Tom to testify against anyone else. He
refused to say anything about his relationship with Ann, or with Laura Foster.
He was pronounced guilty and sentenced to be hanged by the neck until
dead.
May
1, 1868. Tom Dula rode through the streets of Statesville in a wagon for
the last time. He sat on the top of his coffin with his banjo on his knee, joking with the throng of people walking along. He played his favorite
ballad and laughed as the wagon neared the gallows.
As the rope was placed around his neck, he
joked with Sheriff W. E. Watson, "I would have washed my neck if I
had known you were using such a nice
clean new rope".
Asked if he had any last words to say, Tom
Dula held up his right hand and replied,
"Gentlemen, do you see this hand? Do you see it
tremble? Do you see it shake? I never hurt a hair on the girl's head".
The trap door was dropped.
The drop did not break his neck. He
performed “the dead man's dance” for more than five minutes, meaning he kicked
his feet in the air while he was being strangled to death. After ten minutes,
he still had a pulse. Thirteen minutes after he was dropped, Tom Dula was
pronounced dead by the attending physician.
Tom was buried in a cemetery in Happy Valley
on the side of the old North Wilkesboro
Road near Elksville, North Carolina, near where Big Elkin Creek meets the Yadkin River a few miles northeast
of Roaring River.
Vance also defended Ann Melton. People in
town thought she was a witch, and that evil lived within her, but she was found
not guilty. For the rest of her life the shadow of Laura's murder followed her,
but one day the shadow caught up with her. She was killed in a freak accident,
a wagon overturning crushed her.
The graves of Laura and Ann are visited each year by
thousands of tourists. Tom Dula's grave is on private property and not open to the public. The
"Tom Dooley" museum is located in Ferguson, North Carolina at the
Whippoorwill Academy and Village. Tourists can also visit the Old Wilkes Jail
where Tom and Ann were held before their trials.
The famous 'Ballad of Tom Dooley' was
written by a local poet, Thomas C. Land,
at the time of Dula's hanging. It became very popular among the mountain
people. In 1958, the Kingston Trio had a #1 song with their version of the song
titled 'Tom Dooley'.
HANG DOWN YOUR HEAD, TOM DOOLEY
(traditional; as performed by the Kingston Trio)
Hang down your head, Tom Dooley
Hang down your head and cry
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley
Poor boy, you're bound to die
I met her on the mountain
There I took her life
Met her on the mountain
Stabbed her with my knife
Hang down your head, Tom Dooley
Hang down your head and cry
Hang down your head, Tom Dooley
Poor boy, you're bound to die
This time tomorrow
Reckon where I'll be
Hadn't a-been for Grayson
I'd a-been in Tennessee
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley
Hang down your head and cry
Hang down your head, Tom Dooley
Poor boy, you're bound to die
This time tomorrow
Reckon where I'll be
Down in some lonesome valley
Hangin' from a white oak tree
Hang down your head,
Tom Dooley
Hang down your head and cry
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley
Poor boy, you're bound to
die
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley
Hang down your head and cry
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley
Poor boy, you're bound to
die
Poor boy, you're bound to
die
Poor boy you're bound to
die
Poor boy, you're bound to
die...