Judge Logan had been a mentor to Lincoln, as well as a friend. The fact that Logan, perhaps the most respected lawyer in the region, had selected young Lincoln to be his law partner in 1841 provided a tremendous boost to Lincoln’s career. One reason for the selection, he later wrote, was that Lincoln had the ability to bond with all people: “Lincoln seemed to put himself at once on an equality with everybody—never of course while they were outrageous, never while they were drunk or noisy or anything of the kind.” The partnership had been dissolved after three years because Logan wanted to work with his son, and by then Lincoln felt ready to establish his own firm. Lincoln always spoke fondly of the man and all he had learned from him. During his presidency Lincoln described Stephen Trigg Logan as “one of my most distinguished, and most highly valued friends.” Logan was one of the few people the president invited to travel with him to Gettysburg for the dedication of that battlefield.
Few lawyers in the area were more respected than Logan and Lincoln, Hitt knew, and Quinn Harrison could not have better representation.
The coroner’s inquest into the facts of the encounter, to determine if a crime had been committed, had convened on August 2. The legal question here was simply whether Greek’s death should be deemed a homicide rather than some other noncriminal cause of death. Because of his prior work with Lincoln, Hitt had followed the events as much as possible in these earliest stages, although the details had been sketchy. As many as 75 witnesses were subpoenaed, and most of them eventually testified.
“Listen to this, Bob,” Lincoln told Hitt, withdrawing a newspaper from the pile he had been reading. “Here is the crux of the matter. This from the Register, ‘In the most debatable testimony, Mr. Cartwright testified that Crafton, on his deathbed, absolved Harrison from blame, and blamed himself for the difficulty and its sad result… This was rebutted by Dr. Million, who stated that he had several conversations with Crafton on his dying bed, relative to the difficulty, and that he did not absolve Harrison from blame, but censured him.’ ”
Lincoln laid down the newspaper, squeezed the bridge of his nose between his thumb and forefinger, and went on to explain that he and Logan had agreed immediately on their strategy for this hearing: This was clearly a case of self-defense. Peachy Quinn had been attacked by the Crafton brothers and had been forced to fight back to save himself. One witness even testified that he had heard Crafton boasting that he intended to throw down Harrison and stomp on his face.
The prosecution disagreed, of course, examining the same facts and arguing quite a different conclusion: The laws concerning self-defense had been mostly settled; a man had no legal right to stand his ground but to save himself from imminent and serious bodily harm or death—then and only then did he have the right to use deadly force. Harrison could have avoided this fight, but instead had armed himself with a deadly weapon that he was prepared to use. When given the opportunity, the prosecution argued, he had knowingly murdered Greek Crafton.
The whole of the event was argued back and forth with great skill, although Lincoln admitted to Hitt that neither he nor Logan anticipated it would end at the initial pretrial hearings. Feelings were far too raw for a decision to be reached without all of the evidence being presented and all of the witnesses heard. Failing that, the town might never heal. There would have to be a full-blown trial.
The coroner’s inquest came a few weeks before the Sangamon circuit Grand Jury would officially determine if charges were to be lodged against Harrison.
That was but a formality, Lincoln knew. The Grand Jury would indict and Peachy Quinn Harrison’s trial would begin within days after that.
This story is excerpted from Lincoln’s Last Trial: The Murder Case That Propelled Him to the Presidency by Dan Abrams and David Fisher, published by Harper Collins.