Killler Dads and Custody Lists

Thursday, December 9, 2010

DASTARDLY DADS FROM THE ARCHIVES (Seattle, Washington - 1926)

Interesting case from the 1920s. The parents of this young woman divorced in Massachusetts when she was still a small child. The father, BOB GAINES, then moved to the state of Washington. Just after she graduated from Smith College, the daughter decided to visit her father, whom she barely knew. Seems Daddy Dearest then embarked on a sexually abusive "unatural relationship" with his daughter. When the daughter made it clear that she wanted to leave his home, her father killed her--either to prevent her from leaving or keep her from revealing their "affair."

http://www.mygreenlake.com/2010/12/gaines-point-greenlake-murder/

The story of Gaines Point, site of 1926 Green Lake Park murder

December 8, 2010 at 7:06PM

On the northeastern shores of Green Lake, between the Green Lake Community Center and the wading pool, there is a little grove of poplar trees. The trees populate a small bit of land that juts out into the lake, past the walking path. This area is called “Gaines Point,” and it holds a dark history.

In 1926, a body was discovered in this part of Green Lake Park.

The story of Sylvia Gaines, who at the age of 22 was killed by her father, can be found on HistoryLink.org. HistoryLink has very kindly licensed their work under a Creative Commons license, allowing us to also share it with you here:

Murder at Green Lake (Seattle): Sylvia Gaines

In the early morning of June 17, 1926, a carpenter was walking around the north end of Seattle’s Green Lake to go to work. In an alder grove on a point of land he discovered a pair of women’s shoes next to the lake. He walked a few feet farther and found the woman — dead and nearly naked — sprawled near the shore. The body belonged to 22-year-old Sylvia Gaines (1904-1926).

Seattle Was Shocked

From the moment Sylvia’s body was discovered, the Gaines murder case became one of the most sensational in Seattle’s history. For one thing, Sylvia was young and pretty, a graduate of an elite Eastern women’s college (Smith). For another, she had a prominent relative: her father’s brother, William Gaines, was the chair of the King County Board of Commissioners.

The funeral was held on July 10, 1926. Bob Gaines, Sylvia’s father, was by then the prime suspect but was permitted to attend. He showed no emotion, but his brother wept.

The murder case was front page news for months. Seattle was shocked and fascinated by the sordid details that emerged concerning this young woman’s life and death.

What Father Would Kill His Child?

Sylvia Gaines was born in Massachusetts in 1904. Her parents split up in 1909, when her father, Wallace C. Bob Gaines, came to Washington state, leaving Sylvia and her mother behind. Shortly afterwards, the couple divorced. In September of 1925, Sylvia, having graduated from Smith College, came to Seattle to visit her father whom she barely knew. Fewer than 10 months after her arrival, she was murdered. The prime suspect was her father, Bob Gaines, a World War I veteran.

At first Gaines was not suspected. On June 17, 1926, he reported his daughter missing, and after her body was found, he identified her at the morgue. Ewing Colvin, the King County Prosecutor (and a good friend of Gaines’ brother William) thought Bob Gaines innocent — for what father would kill his child? — and thought it likely that some fiend had assaulted and killed Sylvia.

The Evidence Mounts

But evidence kept pointing to Gaines as the murderer. When authorities questioned Gaines on the morning of June 17, he was intoxicated and made statements suggesting that he knew who the murderer was. Investigators turned up several of Gaines’ neighbors and friends who saw him on the night of the murder, very drunk and disturbed at his daughter’s disappearance.
The murder trial began on August 2, 1926. The prosecutor asked for the death penalty. A jury was chosen, consisting of nine men and three women. The women jurors got a lot of attention from the press because although women had received the vote in 1920, many states prohibited them from serving on juries — a prohibition that continued in some states well into the 1940s. Media and public attention was so intense that the judge ordered the jury sequestered in a downtown Seattle hotel.

Ewing Colvin Prosecutes

Colvin called witnesses to testify about the events of the evening of June 16. He quickly demolished the “fiend theory,” that a stranger had raped and killed Sylvia; no one — neither neighbors nor people walking by the lake near the murder site — had heard any outcry. This made it very likely that Sylvia was killed not by a stranger, but by someone she knew and had no reason to fear.

Witnesses reported seeing Gaines at the lake shore around 9 o’clock that evening, near where Sylvia’s body was later found. He was bending down over someone or something. Other witnesses said they’d seen Gaines drive around the lake several times about the time of the murder.

Sylvia was strangled and her head battered with a blunt instrument. She died around 9 p.m. on the night of June 16. Authorities found a bloody rock near the murder site. Testimony established that she had been murdered in one spot and that her body had been dragged to another, several yards away, and arranged in a manner to suggest sexual assault.

Gaines testified that he and Sylvia had quarreled on the evening of June 16. Sylvia, in an angry mood, left their home at 108 N. 51st Street shortly after 8 p.m. that evening for a walk around the lake. Gaines said he left at about 8:40 p.m. when he drove around nearby streets looking for her and then drove to the home of his friend and drinking companion, Louis Stern. He arrived there about 9:30 p.m.

Stern’s evidence was damning. He reported that Gaines came to his house to drink and all but confessed that he’d murdered his daughter. Gaines said, “You know what I have always told you, that if anyone in my house told me when I should come and go and when I should drink and how much, why I would kill em. … Well, that’s what happened.”

An Unnatural Relationship

Colvin had established where, when, and how Sylvia had been killed, but he had to provide a motive. Colvin’s theory was that Gaines and his daughter had what was then called an unnatural relationship. Gaines knew that Sylvia wanted to leave his home (she’d made plans to go stay with her uncle William Gaines) and he killed her to keep her from leaving him or revealing the incestuous affair.

According to Colvin, the “unnatural relations” had evidently been going on for most of Sylvia’s visit. She came to Seattle in September 1925 to get to know her father. She and her father had not seen each other since 1909, when she was five years old. Sylvia moved in with her father and his second wife: They lived in a small one-bedroom house. When Sylvia first arrived, she slept on the couch in the living room while her father and his wife slept in the bedroom. The three of them quarreled frequently. Evidently Mrs. Gaines was distraught about the situation, and in November 1925, she tried to kill herself. At that time, Sylvia and her father were threatening to leave the home and get an apartment.

Gaines’ neighbor said she had believed the two were sharing a bed and that Mrs. Gaines slept on the couch. Other witnesses described angry quarrels that erupted between Gaines and Sylvia in public. A Seattle patrolman had discovered Gaines and his daughter late at night parked in Gaines’ car in Woodland Park — as teenaged lovers might. An employee of a downtown Seattle hotel testified that in November 1925 she had seen Gaines and his daughter — in their nightclothes — together in bed.

In his closing statement, Colvin argued that Gaines had been sexually involved with his daughter for some months, and that she was fed up and about to leave. On the evening of June 16, they quarreled, and Sylvia left the house to get away from him. Gaines went after her, found her walking near Green Lake and, in a jealous, alcoholic rage, killed her. Then, to make it look like she’d been raped and killed, he tore her clothes, dragged her body nearer the path and arranged her limbs in a manner to suggest sexual attack. He continued to drink heavily and confessed the murder to his friend Louis Stern.

A Murderer Is Hanged

The jury deliberated a little over three hours and found Gaines guilty. He was sentenced to die. He appealed his case but was unsuccessful. On August 31, 1928, in Walla Walla, he was hanged.
The grove of alder trees on the north end of Green Lake is gone, replaced by more than 30 large black cottonwoods (Populus trichcarpal). Local legend has it that the community planted the cottonwoods on what is now called Gaines Point, in memory of Sylvia Gaines. Those cottonwood trees grew to be about 70 years old, and provided roosting places for bald eagles, and other raptors. In 1999, the Seattle Park Department decreed that the trees must go because mature cottonwoods drop limbs and threaten public safety. The Parks Department clear-cut the grove and replaced the cottonwoods with Populus x Robusta, which like other poplars is fast growing but has proven to be more durable.

Thus has the last physical reminder of this sad piece of Seattle history been removed.

Sources:

State of Washington v. Gaines 144 Wash 446, 258 p. 508; The Seattle Times June 17, 18, 21, 23, 24, 25, 1926; Ibid., July 3-8 (every day), 12, 18, 20, 26, 27, 1926; Ibid., August 1-13 (every day), 16-22 (every day), 26, 27, 1926; Ibid. August 28, 29, 31, 1928.Note: This essay was revised in June 2000. By Susan Helf, April 24, 1999
View Larger Map108 N 51st St, the home of Bob and Sylvia Gaines, today.
Some believe that Gaines Point is haunted by the ghost of Sylvia Gaines. In his book Ghost Hunter’s Guide to Seattle, Jeff Dwyer writes that Sylvia’s “pale apparition hides behind the trees and shrubs, revealing only part of her face.” Sylvia’s ghost, Dwyer claims, “has been spotted in daylight, but most sightings occur after sunset.”