Roots and Shadows: The Real Appalachia Podcast
On March 14, 1912, a quiet morning in the mountain town of Hillsville, Virginia, turned into one of the deadliest courtroom shootings in American history. It started with a guilty verdict. Less than two minutes later, Judge Thornton Lemmon Massie, Sheriff Lewis Webb, Commonwealth's Attorney William Foster, juror Augustus Fowler, and 19-year-old Bettie Ayers had all been fatally shot. The violence inside the Carroll County Courthouse shocked the nation, launched one of the largest manhunts in Virginia history, and left behind a mystery that has never been answered. Who fired the first shot? This week on Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia Podcast, we travel to Carroll County, Virginia, to uncover the true story behind the Hillsville Courthouse Shootout of 1912. But this isn't simply the story of a courtroom battle. It's the story of a mountain community, powerful family loyalties, political divisions, and a way of life where reputation could carry as much weight as the law itself. You'll meet Floyd Allen, a prosperous farmer, merchant, former deputy sheriff, county supervisor, and one of the most influential men in Carroll County. You'll also meet his son Claude Allen, his brother J. Sidna Allen, Judge Thornton Lemmon Massie, Commonwealth's Attorney William Foster, Sheriff Lewis Webb, and the families whose lives were forever changed by one tragic morning. We'll take you back to the church gathering and corn shucking that set these events in motion, the confrontation between Floyd Allen and the deputies transporting his nephews, and the trial that brought everyone together inside the Carroll County Courthouse in Hillsville. Then, we'll walk through the events of March 14, 1912, almost minute by minute, as a guilty verdict, Floyd Allen's famous words—"Gentlemen, I ain't a-goin'"—and a burst of gunfire transformed a courtroom into a battlefield. The story doesn't end there. After the shooting, members of the Allen family disappeared into the Blue Ridge Mountains, prompting one of Virginia's largest fugitive hunts. You'll learn how the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency, a private detective firm headquartered in Roanoke that would later become infamous during the Appalachian coal wars, helped track down the fugitives from Virginia to Des Moines, Iowa. We'll also follow the trials that were moved to neighboring Wythe County, the executions of Floyd and Claude Allen, the later pardons of several family members, and the rediscovery of long-lost trial records more than a century later. Even today, historians continue to debate what really happened inside that courtroom. Witnesses disagreed. Families told different stories. The evidence often conflicted. And despite generations of research, one question still lingers over Hillsville. Who fired first? If you enjoy podcasts about Appalachian history, Virginia history, American true crime, the Blue Ridge Mountains, forgotten history, courthouse mysteries, family feuds, the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency, or the people and places that shaped Appalachia, this episode is for you. Roots & Shadows: The Real Appalachia Podcast takes you beyond the headlines and into the mountains where these stories happened. Every episode is researched on location whenever possible and explores the history, true crime, folklore, legends, and forgotten people that make Appalachia unlike anywhere else in America.
27 episodios
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