052524 Way Black History Fact - The Youngest Person Ever Executed in PA - podcast episode cover

052524 Way Black History Fact - The Youngest Person Ever Executed in PA

May 25, 20244 min
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Episode description

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Our Way Black History Fact is dedicated to Alexander McClay Williams…the youngest person to ever be executed by the commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

All right, Next up, it's time for the Way Black History Fact. In Today's Way Black History Fact is sponsored by Major Threads for innovative, fashionable sportswear. Check major threads dot com. I'm gonna share a story with you from Wikipedia. I believe it to be true of research to other sources, but this is well written and I believe it's as factual as is necessary. But so you know, it's from Wikipedia.

Alexandra McLay Williams July twenty third, nineteen fourteen to July sorry to June eighth, nineteen thirty one was an African American teenager wrongfully convicted and executed for the nineteen thirty murder of thirty three year old Vita Robar, a matron of the Glen Mills Reform School he attended in Pennsylvania. Williams confessed to the murder, although he later recanted his confession.

The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania wrongfully executed Williams for Robar's murder in nineteen thirty one, when he was sixteen years old, making Williams the youngest person ever executed in Pennsylvania. Vita Robar worked at the Glen Mills schools alongside Fred Robar, an agriculture instructor who, according to contemporaneous news reports, was

her husband. Later researched by the grandson of Williams's attorney revealed that the Robars were actually divorced before the killing on the grounds of Fred Robar's extreme cruelty and domestic abuse towards Vita, and from that, you're supposed to infer that she comes from a violent home life with her husband, and yet the sixteen year old is the person who was executed. Earlier parts of Robar's killing claim that Fred, misidentified as her husband, returned home from work on October third,

nineteen thirty and stumbled across the crime scene. He alerted police afterwards, who arrived to find Robar lying in her bed, partially clothed, with over thirty five dab wounds in her chest, a fractured skull, and two broken ribs. There was a man's bloody handprint on a nearby wall, as ostensibly belonging

to the killer. The handprint was photographed by the Pennsylvania State Police and examined by two local fingerprint experts, but it was never mentioned again either a trial or in contemporary newspaper accounts, and it was never determined to belong to Alexander McClay Williams. Three days after the murder, authorities claimed that they had evidence linking Alexander Williams to Robar's murder. They then announced that Williams had confessed to Robar's murder.

Authorities alleged that Williams confessed to fatally stabbing Robar with an ice pick in spite of Robar's futally offering him money to stop stabbing her. Initially, authorities claimed that Williams's motive was revenge against Fred Robar for an unknown reason. Authorities also posited that Williams murdered be to Robar because she caught him in the act of stealing a box

of shoe polish from her house. However, days later, the confess was amended to reflect that Williams allegedly murdered Robar because she fought against a rape attempt. Overall, Williams was interrogated five times, all without a parent or attorney president, and signed three confessions. No eyewitnesses or direct evidence connected Williams to the crime. At his trial, which took place

in early January nineteen thirty, one. Williams was represented by William Ridley, the first black lawyer admitted to the bar of Delaware County. Williams I'm sorry. Ridley was paid ten dollars both to investigate evidence and defend Williams. He had ten weeks to build his defense, and on June eighth,

nineteen thirty one, Williams was executed in Pennsylvania's Electrictare. Reporters stated that Williams was emotional, visibly shaking, and reliant on the assistance of a deputy to walk to his death chamber. And the reason I wanted to share this story is because the family is just now bringing a lawsuit nearly one hundred years after his death, because obviously he was

wrongfully convicted. He was forced by the police to confess to a crime that he didn't commit, and everyone knew that it was the husband or ex husband all along.

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