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John C. Colt
John C. Colt
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John Caldwell Colt (March 1, 1810 – November 18, 1842), the brother of Samuel Colt, was an American fur trader, bookkeeper, and law clerk. He served briefly as a U.S. Marine, forging a letter to get himself discharged after three months. After numerous business ventures, he became an authority concerning double-entry bookkeeping and published a textbook concerning the subject, which had 45 editions and remained in continuous publication until 13 years after his death.[1]

Key Information

In 1842, Colt was convicted of the murder of a printer named Samuel Adams, to whom Colt owed money for the publication of a bookkeeping textbook. Colt killed Adams with a hatchet the year previous to his arrest in what he claimed was self-defense, but he had afterwards concealed the crime by disposing of the body. When the body was discovered, Colt was the first suspect. The trial became a sensation in the New York news because of his family name, the manner of disposal of the corpse, and Colt's somewhat arrogant demeanor in the courtroom. Colt was found guilty and sentenced to hang, but killed himself on the morning of his execution.[2]

Conspiracy theories circulated about the suicide, with some holding that Colt had in fact escaped from prison and staged a body to look like his own. One publication alleged that a family member smuggled the knife used in the suicide into his cell. Others stated that Colt was living in California with his wife, Caroline.[2] None of these allegations were ever proven.[3] Edgar Allan Poe may have based the short story "The Oblong Box" partly on the murder of Adams,[4] and Herman Melville alluded to the case in his short story "Bartleby, the Scrivener".

Early life

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Colt coat of arms.

John Colt was born in Hartford, Connecticut. His father was Christopher Colt, a farmer who had relocated his family to Hartford when he changed professions and became a businessman. His mother was Sarah (née Caldwell), with whom Christopher had eight children. Two died during childhood; the eldest sister, Margaret, died of tuberculosis when John was 13 years old. John's brother Samuel Colt founded the Colt's Manufacturing Company.[citation needed]

When John was nine, his father sent him to Hopkins Academy; the next year, the father took him out again, partly because the boy was in constant trouble and partly because the father had lost his fortune in the Panic of 1819.[citation needed]

Colt's mother died of tuberculosis when he was age 11. He and his siblings were then cared for by their father's sister, Lucretia Colt Price, until Christopher remarried two years later to Olivia Sargeant.[citation needed]

Christopher had three more children with Olivia. As they now had financial difficulties, Olivia insisted that her stepchildren work rather than receive schooling. The Colt brothers' one surviving sister, Sarah Ann, acted as a surrogate mother of sorts until she was sent off to a relative's house to work as a menial.[5] John was known to keep locks of hair belonging to her and Margaret all through his life.[citation needed]

At age 14, Colt started work as an assistant bookkeeper for the Union Manufacturing Company in Marlborough, Connecticut. He quit the job and moved to Albany, New York, in less than a year. He returned to Hartford during 1826 and studied at an academy for three months. During 1827, he found employment as a mathematics teacher at a ladies seminary in Baltimore, Maryland, for a year. During 1828, he became a supervisory engineer for a canal near Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. The next year, his sister Sarah Ann killed herself by swallowing arsenic; one newspaper account stated it was due to a fight with her stepmother and another said she "took a morbid view of her doom to labor" until her "fortitude and her mind gave way".[5] Devastated by this loss, John vowed to "leave the country and pass the rest of his days in some foreign land". In despair, he enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. His orders were for a Mediterranean cruise on the U.S.S. Constitution; illness prevented him from serving on the ship, and he worked as a clerk in Norfolk, Virginia, for a man referred to as Colonel Anderson.[6]

Colt spent three months as a marine and was disillusioned with the military lifestyle; clerking in a humid port was not the adventurous life he had envisioned. He was still very ill, but not ill enough for a medical discharge, so he forged a letter in the name of George Hamilton, a farmer from Ware, Massachusetts, stating that his underage son had enlisted falsely with the name of John Colt. He mailed the letter to his brother James and asked him to mail it to Colonel Anderson from Ware. Anderson discharged Colt within days of receiving the letter, citing Colt's illness as the reason and not fraudulent enlistment.[6]

Upon his discharge, Colt spent a year as a law clerk for his cousin Dudley Selden. At the same time, he became a riverboat gambler and was challenged to a duel concerning a shared mistress. Although the duel was never fought, this incident became part of Colt's reputation as a rough gambler. He traveled to Vermont during 1830 as a debate coach for the University of Vermont, at Burlington, Vermont; however, he quit after a year due to symptoms of tuberculosis. Colt then traveled to the Great Lakes region to recuperate and bought a farm in Michigan on Gooden's Lake; however, tubercular symptoms began again and he soon left for Cincinnati, Ohio, where he became a teacher of one of the first correspondence courses in America; he also became part of a group known for Bohemianism, and considered John Howard Payne and Hiram Powers among his friends.[7]

He attempted many business ventures throughout the United States: land speculator in Texas, soap manufacturer in New York, grocery wholesaler in Georgia, fur trader, dry-goods merchant in Florida, and an organizer of Mardi Gras masquerade celebrations in New Orleans.[8]

Double-entry bookkeeping

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While teaching in Louisville, Kentucky, during 1834, Colt began lecturing on "Italian Book-keeping", or double-entry bookkeeping.[9] He toured the United States giving a series of lectures concerning the topic and by 1837 had begun writing a textbook concerning the subject.[10]

His textbook The Italian science of double-entry book-keeping: simplified, arranged and methodized, received good reviews. Colt had the book published in Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, and Cincinnati, and by 1839 more than 200 schools were using it. Colt eliminated the word "Italian" from the title for the second edition and included transcripts of his lectures in the newer editions; the book had 45 printings and was in publication until 1855.[1][11][12]

Soon after publishing the first edition of his textbook, Colt became partners with the publisher, Nathan G. Burgess, using the name Colt, Burgess & Co, in Cincinnati, Ohio. The new business almost became bankrupt after publishing An Introduction into the Origin of Antiquities in America by John Delafield Jr. The scholarship of the text was dubious, and the book was available by subscription only. Hoping for a better market for Delafield's book, Colt relocated to 14 Cortlandt Street in New York during 1839. The office doubled as Colt's residence, and Colt made his own shipping crates there.[13]

Murder of Samuel Adams

[edit]
Authorities open the crate containing the body of Adams, – Sutton 1874.

On September 17, 1841, a New York printer named Samuel Adams went to meet Colt to collect a debt due for some textbooks that Adams had printed for him. The two disagreed about the final amount owed; sources indicate that it was a discrepancy of $1.35.[14] According to Colt, Adams began choking him with his cravat. In self-defense, Colt reached for what he thought was a hammer to fend him off, but the weapon was actually a hatchet.[15] Colt struck Adams four or five times with the weapon, causing Adams to drop to the floor.[15]

Upon seeing that Adams was dead, Colt cleaned up the blood. The next morning (September 18), Colt placed the body into a large shipping crate and packed it with salt. He then addressed it to a non-existent address in New Orleans and hired a car-man named Barstow to deliver it to a ship named the Kalamazoo, scheduled to leave the next morning.[16]

After a day or so, Adams' family began searching the city for him, publishing notices in several newspapers such as the New York Courier and Enquirer and the New York Weekly Tribune notifying people that he was missing. A neighbor of Colt's, Asa H. Wheeler, told Adams' father-in-law, Joseph Lane, that he had heard noises in Colt's office that sounded like a fight followed by a crash to the floor. Peering in the keyhole, he saw someone "bending over something on the floor". Wheeler later secured a key from the landlord and saw that a large packing crate was missing and that the floor had been scrubbed. On September 22, 1841, Colt visited Adams' print shop inquiring about the status of his books and the whereabouts of Adams.[17][18] Adams' bookbinder, Charles Wells, told Colt that the last time Adams had been seen was on the way to visit Colt himself. Colt made no reply to the implied allegation, and excused himself.[19]

Lane, Wheeler, and an employee of Adams named John Loud examined Adams' ledgers for any transactions involving Colt and went to the mayor of New York City, Robert Hunter Morris, with the evidence.[20] Other witnesses said that Adams was last seen entering Colt's apartment on September 17 and that Colt had a crate delivered by a carman the next day.[21] The mayor asked the Superintendent of Carts, William Godfrey, to locate the carman in question and determine the location of the crate. Godfrey found Barstow, who told him the parcel had been delivered to the freighter Kalamazoo.[22]

The Kalamazoo was still in port, delayed from sailing by a storm. The New York police, accompanied by the city's mayor and the carman, boarded the ship and asked if the crate was still in the cargo hold. The decomposing body had already started emitting a strong odor, which ship hands had assumed was a poison put out to kill rats. The stevedore opened the crate, revealing a half-clothed male corpse wrapped in a shop awning, bound with rope and packed with salt. A scar on the body's leg and a single gold ring identified the body as Adams.[21]

Arrest and trial

[edit]

Colt was arrested on September 23 by New York Police and the city's mayor.[17] Adams' gold pocketwatch engraved with an image of the U.S. Capitol was found among his possessions.[23] The trial began on January 13, 1842. Colt was represented by a team of three attorneys managed by his cousin Dudley Selden (for whom Colt had clerked), John Morrill and Robert Emmett. The three were paid in stock from Samuel Colt's new company: Patent Arms Manufacturing Company of Paterson, New Jersey.[24] The Chief Prosecutor was James R. Whiting, district attorney for New York County. The presiding judge was William Kent.[25]

Tried by the press

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The Colt-Adams Murder trial dominated the popular press at the time[4] and exceeded news of another New York murder, that of Mary Rogers. The press depicted Colt as a former professional riverboat gambler who had public affairs with women and a common-law wife and who committed perjury to enlist in and quit the Marines.[26] Although the nature of the crime and the fact that Colt cohabited with an unmarried pregnant woman, Caroline Henshaw,[27] added to the publicity, most of it was due to John Colt's relationship to Samuel Colt.[28][29] Coverage appeared in New York papers such as The Sun, which incorrectly labeled a picture of P.T. Barnum purchased from the Albany Evening Atlas as a picture of Adams.[30] Religious magazines such as The Catholic Herald, Evangelical Magazine, Episcopal Recorder and Gospel Advocate used the story to demonstrate such problems as the "lack of morality in the home".[31]

Throughout the trial, Colt was repeatedly accused of "cold-blooded murder" by the New York press.[32] The October 30 issue of the weekly Tribune quoted James Colt, then practicing law in St Louis as saying "insanity is hereditary in our family".[32] James Gordon Bennett wrote lengthy editorials in the New York Herald about Colt's "confidence, assurance, and impudence" and that his "limitless potential has been undermined by a want of moral and religious culture".[33] The major exception was The Knickerbocker in which Lewis Gaylord Clark reported the murder as a "misfortunate accident".[31] Colt's lawyers continually petitioned Judge Kent to forbid press coverage, but Kent refused them by saying "The Court has done everything to prevent the jury from being influenced from without".[32]

Murder weapon

[edit]
Colt was incorrectly believed to have used one of his brother's revolvers for Adams' murder.

Halfway through the trial, Whiting made allegations that Adams had been murdered with a Colt Paterson revolver rather than a hatchet.[34] Whiting came to this conclusion after Doctor Gilman, who examined the body with the coroner, testified about a round hole in Adams' skull that could not have been made by the hatchet and suggested that Colt used a revolver in a premeditated act by which he lured Adams to his death.[35] Although no witnesses had reported the sounds of gunfire, Whiting's argument was that a revolver ball fired by the power of the percussion cap alone could propel the ball with "enough force to kill a man", without making the noise of the exploding black powder in the cylinder.[35] Several witnesses were called in to testify against this idea including an early ballistician named Zabrisky and Samuel Colt himself, who demonstrated to the court, by shooting his revolver in the courtroom and catching the fired balls in his hand, that such a shot could not penetrate to the depth of the wound found on Adams' skull.[34][35]

Despite Selden's objections, Whiting had the coroner, David L. Rogers, bring Adams' skull and the hatchet into the courtroom to show the jury the direction and number of strikes made. John Colt was reported as "covering his face" at this demonstration.[34][36][37] The cylindrical wound which Whiting and Gilman thought was made by a ball fired from a revolver was actually caused by one of the nails used by Colt to seal the crate.[35] Gilman conceded that the wound was caused by a nail and admitted that no foreign object such as a ball from a revolver was found in the victim's head.[34]

Colt admitted he had killed Adams and planned to confess before he was arrested. He attested that he acted in self-defense.[38]

I then sat down, for I felt weak and sick. After sitting a few minutes, and seeing so much blood, I think I went and looked at poor Adams, who breathed quite loud for several minutes, then threw his arms out and was silent. I recollect at this time taking him by the hand, which seemed lifeless, and a horrid thrill came over me, that I had killed him. – John C. Colt[39]

Colt reported that his first thought was to burn down the building to destroy the evidence, but as a number of people lived in the building, he reconsidered rather than "cause more carnage". He decided instead to dispose of the body in a large packing crate, and wrapped it in an awning and bound it with rope. After scrubbing the floor he threw Adams' clothing into a nearby outdoor privy, then stopped at the Washington bathhouse on Pearl Street to wash the blood from his clothes and hands.[32]

Verdict

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Closing arguments were made on January 23, 1842. Selden argued that Colt had acted in self-defense as Adams had been choking him and Colt's only means to defend himself was to grab a nearby weapon. His defense for hiding the body was temporary insanity.[38] Whiting countered in a two-hour-long rebuttal that the killing was premeditated; he alluded to Colt's demeanor at the trial, the taking of Adams' watch, the leaving of a hatchet in plain view, and Colt's method of disposing of the body as evidence contradicting Colt's claim that his actions were that of an innocent man acting in self-defense.[40] Judge Kent dismissed the argument for self-defense based on Colt's attempted concealment and instructed the jury that since Colt had confessed to the murder that they were to determine whether the charge should be murder or manslaughter. Kent remarked on Colt's "careless air" demonstrated throughout the trial in the courtroom and said his behavior was "not typical of an innocent man".[24] The jury was disturbed by Colt's demeanor throughout the trial, agreeing with the judge that Colt appeared stoic, unremorseful and callous when describing his disposal of Adams' body.[27] On January 24, after deliberating for over 10 hours, the jury found Colt guilty of willful murder.[41]

Colt's team requested an appeal and argued the case on May 5, 1842, asking for a new trial as the jury at the previous was misinformed; on May 12 a new trial was denied and his lawyers appealed to the State Supreme Court located in Utica, New York. The State Supreme Court heard the case on July 16, 1842, and upheld the earlier court's decision. Colt's sentencing date was scheduled for September 27, 1842.[41] Undaunted, Colt's lawyers recruited Rogers, the surgeon who performed Adams' autopsy, "to investigate the probable relative position and actions" of Colt and Adams during their struggle.[42] By analyzing the number, shape, and position of the wounds and the blood splatter; Rogers deduced that the two "grappled face to face within a foot-and-a-half of each other" and "Adams was in an erect position at the time the fatal blows were inflicted".[42] The report was submitted to Governor William H. Seward in the hope of securing a pardon for Colt.[42] Seward was overwhelmed with requests asking for a pardon for Colt, including those from 36 lawyers who visited him personally in Albany as well as from judges and attorneys who knew Seward, such as Judge Ambrose Spencer and former Attorney General Willis Hall.[43] Seward, in the end, would not pardon Colt, as he felt the attempted concealment of the crime and Colt's demeanor throughout the trial were not the actions of a "penitent man".[44]

The prisoner has forgotten his victim, heaped insult upon his humble and bereaved family, defied the court, denounced the jury, and presented himself before the executive as an injured, not a penitent man. – William H. Seward[44]

Marriage and death

[edit]
Depiction of Colt's wedding in prison from an 1874 text.

On September 28, 1842, after exhausting his final appeal, Colt was sentenced to death by hanging and remanded to New York City's infamous prison, the Tombs. His sentence was to be performed on November 14, 1842. Colt asked that he be allowed to marry Caroline Henshaw on the morning of his hanging. While imprisoned, Colt lived luxuriously in his prison cell, receiving daily visits from friends and family, smoking Cuban cigars, sleeping in an actual bed instead of a mound of straw and wearing silk dressing gowns inside and a seal skin overcoat for his daily walks in the prison yard. His cell contained the latest novels, a gilded bird cage with a canary and fresh flowers brought to him every day by Henshaw.[45][46] He dined on meals from local hotels such as quail on toast, game pates, reed birds, and ortolans.[46] Several attempts were made to remove him from the prison by dressing him in women's clothing but all these efforts were foiled.[47][48] A doctor was hired who claimed he could resuscitate Colt from the hanging, providing the body did not remain suspended long, as he believed Colt's neck to be of such thickness that strangulation would be impossible.[47] Colt's friends lodged the doctor in the Shakespeare Hotel on the morning of the scheduled hanging and planned to take the body there from the Tombs for resuscitation.[47]

On the morning of November 14, 1842, Colt and Henshaw were married in the prison at a small ceremony conducted by Rev Henry Anthon, an Episcopal Minister, and witnessed by Samuel Colt and John Howard Payne. After the ceremony and a few hours before the scheduled execution, a fire began in the Tombs. After the fire was extinguished, Colt's body was found in his cell. He had stabbed himself in the heart with a clasp knife, believed to have been smuggled to him by a family member.[49] His body was taken by Rev Anthon and buried in the churchyard of St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery.[3]

Aftermath

[edit]

As the trial had made headlines in the daily newspapers, so did Colt's death. Theories were publicized that Colt had killed another prisoner and escaped during the fire.[50] One newspaper account said that Colt had fled to California with his wife, as did a book published by a former New York Chief of Police.[51] A man named Samuel M. Everett claimed he met John Colt (or a man who looked identical) in the Santa Clara Valley in California during 1852, and the account was published in Pearson's Magazine.[52] Harold Schechter, a researcher and author of two books about John Colt dismisses this as "an outlandish tale" and a "product of folklore, not fact".[53] An article in The New York Times written during 1880 said that Caroline Henshaw was watched by private detectives for years after Colt's death and that no sign was ever seen of him alive.[54] None of these speculations of Colt's escape was proven to be true.[3]

Colt historian William Edwards wrote that Caroline Henshaw married Samuel Colt in Scotland when Colt met her in Europe and that the son she bore was Samuel Colt's and not John Colt's.[55] In a 1953 biography about Samuel Colt, based largely on family letters, Edwards wrote that John's marriage to Caroline was a way to legitimize her son Sammy. Samuel Colt had abandoned her because he felt she was not fit to be the wife of an industrialist and divorce was a social stigma at the time.[55] Samuel Colt cared for the child named Samuel Caldwell Colt financially with a large allowance and paid for his tuition in what was described as "the finest private schools". In correspondence with and about his namesake, Samuel Colt referred to him as his "nephew" in quotes. Historians such as Edwards and Harold Schechter have said this was the elder Colt's way of letting the world know that the boy was his own son without saying so directly.[56] After Samuel Colt's death during 1862, he left the boy $2 million by 2010 standards. Colt's widow, Elizabeth Jarvis Colt, and her brother contested this. In probate court, Caroline's son Sam produced a valid marriage license showing that Caroline and Samuel Colt were married in Scotland during 1838 and that this document made him a rightful heir to part of Colt's estate, if not to the Colt Manufacturing Company.[55][56]

References in literature

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
John C. Colt (March 1810 – November 18, 1842) was an American accountant, educator, and author best known as the older brother of firearms inventor and for the notorious 1841 murder of printer in , which led to his conviction and suicide in prison while awaiting execution. Born in , to Christopher Colt Sr., a silk manufacturer, and Sarah Caldwell Colt, John was the eldest of five children in a family that faced financial hardship after the following his mother's early death. He received an irregular education, attending the as a special student from 1830 to 1831, where he excelled in debates, before pursuing varied pursuits including farming, law clerking, and merchant work in cities such as and New Orleans. By the late 1830s, Colt had settled in , where he established himself as a self-taught , operating a bookkeeping school and delivering lectures across the Northeast. Colt's most notable professional achievement was his 1838 textbook, The Science of , Simplified by the Introduction of a New and Improved Method of Journalizing, which went through at least 46 editions by 1856 and was adopted in over 200 seminaries, establishing him as a prominent figure in early American . The book emphasized practical methods, including four public addresses on principles and the historical development of double-entry systems, and it remained influential even after his , reflecting Colt's advocacy for integrating into public school curricula to match European standards. Despite his scholarly success, Colt's was marked by instability, including heavy , , and relationships with multiple mistresses, one of whom, Caroline Henshaw, he married shortly before his . On September 17, 1841, Colt killed 30-year-old printer in his office during a heated dispute over an unpaid $71.15 printing bill for Colt's bookkeeping materials, using an ax-hammer in what he later claimed was . In a , he dismembered the body, packed it into a crate labeled as books, and shipped it via to , where it was discovered weeks later in a New Orleans warehouse, sparking widespread media frenzy and one of the era's most sensational missing-persons investigations. Arrested after a neighbor reported suspicious noises, Colt's January 1842 trial drew national attention, with his brother providing financial support and even demonstrating his new in court to counter weapon-related claims; however, testimony about Colt's volatile temper and personal scandals, including his affair with Henshaw (who was also linked to ), undermined his defense. Convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to hang on November 18, 1842, Colt married Henshaw that morning; he had previously fathered a son with her, whose paternity was later disputed. Hours before the execution, he committed suicide in his cell at prison using a smuggled , slashing his throat and amid a distracting fire, though rumors of escape persisted due to the destruction of his body in the blaze. The case, emblematic of mid-19th-century urban violence and class tensions, overshadowed Colt's contributions to but cemented his infamy in American criminal history.

Early Life and Family

Birth and Upbringing

John Caldwell Colt was born on March 12, 1810, in Hartford, Connecticut, to Christopher Colt Sr. and Sarah Caldwell Colt. His father, a silk merchant and prominent businessman in Hartford, had married Sarah, the daughter of a wealthy and respected local businessman and official, in 1805, establishing the family in a position of moderate affluence within the community's mercantile circles. The Colts resided in Hartford, where Christopher's ventures in textiles contributed to the family's social and economic status, though financial strains emerged later in the early 1820s. The Colt household included several siblings, among them a younger brother, , born on July 19, 1814, who would later gain fame as an inventor of the . Other siblings were Margaret C. (born 1806), Sarah Ann (born 1808), Christopher Jr. (born 1812), James B. (born 1816), Mary (born 1819), and Norman K. (born 1821), though several died young from illnesses like . John and Samuel shared a close bond in their early years, marked by protective acts such as John's rescue of Samuel from drowning in 1819, yet their relationship also carried undertones of amid the family's shifting fortunes. Sarah Caldwell Colt's death from in 1821, when John was 11, profoundly affected the children, leading to their father's remarriage to Olive Sargeant and introducing tensions in the household dynamics. John's early childhood in was shaped by exposure to his father's business activities, fostering an initial awareness of and . Incidents during these formative years highlighted both his and mischievous tendencies; at age five, he was rescued from a vat, and around age eight, a from a homemade temporarily impaired his eyesight. He displayed early scholarly interests by reading Rollin's Ancient History, drawing inspiration from tales of Greek and Roman valor, which sparked his imaginative and adventurous spirit. These experiences, amid a backdrop of tragedies and economic pressures—including Christopher's financial embarrassments around —set the stage for John's independent streak, as evidenced by his later escapades like running away briefly in 1825.

Education and Family Relations

John Caldwell Colt received his early education in local schools in Hartford, Connecticut, focusing on foundational skills including penmanship and introductory business studies that aligned with his family's mercantile interests. At the age of 14, in 1824, he began practical exposure through a brief stint as an assistant bookkeeper at the Union Manufacturing Company in Marlborough, Connecticut, which introduced him to accounting principles amid his father's own ventures in trade and manufacturing. Following his brief work as an assistant bookkeeper in , Colt attended an academy near for three months in 1825, studying classics. In 1829, he studied under President Fisk at in . From 1830 to 1831, he attended the as a special student, where he excelled in debates. Following this, Colt turned to self-directed learning, particularly in , through independent study of methods, while taking short positions in family-related enterprises to apply his growing expertise. This period of self-education shaped his later ambitions in commercial , distinct from his more structured early schooling. Colt's family relations extended significantly through his maternal Caldwell lineage, as his mother, Colt, hailed from a prominent family whose connections provided social and economic context during his upbringing. His ties to the Caldwell family influenced his early environment in , though strained by his mother's death from in 1821. Additionally, Colt's relationship with his younger brother, , who began developing early inventions like chemical experiments and mechanical devices in his teens, inspired John's own aspirations toward practical ingenuity and , fostering a dynamic of mutual support amid family challenges.

Professional Career

Bookkeeping Innovations

John C. Colt published The Science of Double Entry Book-Keeping: Simplified, Arranged and Methodized After the Forms of Grammar and Arithmetic in 1838 through N.G. Burgess & Co. in Cincinnati, Ohio. The text presented a streamlined version of the Italian double-entry system, adapting its principles for practical application by American merchants and clerks who lacked formal training in complex European accounting traditions. Colt's approach emphasized clarity and accessibility, structuring the material like grammar and arithmetic lessons to facilitate self-study and classroom instruction. Central to the book's innovations was its focus on procedural guidance over abstract theory, providing detailed step-by-step instructions for recording without relying on mathematical equations. Instead, Colt integrated basic arithmetic directly into examples, using real-world transactions—such as buying on or settling accounts—to illustrate entries in journals, , and day-books. This hands-on method, accompanied by practical forms and a companion key for journalizing, made approachable for everyday business use in the growing U.S. economy. The book's success was evident in its widespread adoption, with at least 46 editions printed from 1838 to 1856, reflecting strong demand in educational and commercial settings. It became a staple in American schools and businesses, contributing to the of practices during the antebellum period. Colt himself reinforced its impact by teaching and in New York after 1838, while operating one of the earliest correspondence courses in the subject from 1834 onward. His motivation stemmed from personal financial education through self-study, aiming to elevate from a rudimentary to a systematic amid the era's expanding .

Business Ventures and Challenges

John C. Colt pursued a teaching career focused on and , securing positions as an instructor of ornamental penmanship in New York during the 1830s. He lectured on practices in cities including , Dayton, , and from 1837 to 1841, drawing on his expertise to educate students in commercial skills. In 1841, Colt established Colt's Commercial Academy in New York, where he offered instruction in and related business subjects, building on the success of his textbook The Science of as a supplementary source. Beyond teaching, Colt engaged in various entrepreneurial efforts, including mercantile operations in cities such as , , , Louisville, and New Orleans. He opened bookstores in in 1838 and New York in 1839 to distribute his publications and formed the partnership Colt, Burgess and Company in 1839. His speculative investments encompassed , such as purchasing a in in 1832, and various trade ventures in the Midwest; however, these often resulted in losses, including significant setbacks from an agent's unwise dealings in New Orleans in 1838. To manage mounting financial pressures, Colt sought assistance from family connections, pressing his brother for help with debts in 1841. Colt's ventures were plagued by chronic debts, exacerbated by gambling and imprudent decisions that led to unpaid obligations, such as a $121.68 note to . He faced allegations of forgery, including a possible instance tied to his discharge from the U.S. Marine Corps in 1829, and was arrested in New York in 1839 for an attempted while intoxicated, though he was released after sobering up. These challenges stood in stark contrast to the rising success of his brother , whose innovations in firearms brought wealth and prominence to the family. By the early 1840s, escalating creditor demands and operational instability threatened Colt's enterprises, foreshadowing deeper personal and financial turmoil.

The Murder Incident

Dispute with Samuel Adams

In the summer of 1841, John C. Colt, operating a bookkeeping academy in , commissioned local printer to produce copies of his textbook on , The Science of Double Entry Bookkeeping, Simplified by the Introduction of a New and Improved Method of Journalizing, along with related bills and legal documents needed for his business operations. Adams, a well-regarded printer with a shop at the corner of Ann and Gold Streets, had previously handled similar work in the city's competitive publishing scene, earning a reputation for reliability and precision in commercial printing. Colt's academy, while successful in attracting students, was strained by ongoing business debts that limited his , setting the stage for friction in their professional relationship. The dispute originated from Adams' insistence on full payment before completing or delivering the final batch of printed materials, a standard practice to mitigate risk with overdue accounts. Colt, facing cash shortages amid his academy's financial pressures and personal extravagances, refused to pay the full amount upfront, arguing that the total owed was less than claimed due to prior partial payments and adjustments. The disagreement centered on a sum of approximately $75, with Adams demanding $71.15 while Colt maintained it was only $55.85 after deductions for errors in the printing work. These negotiations devolved into heated arguments, exacerbated by Colt's increasingly erratic behavior—marked by irritability from his demanding schedule and rumored personal indiscretions—which contrasted sharply with Adams' steady, professional demeanor. Tensions had simmered in New York City's tight-knit printing circles, where Colt's prior minor clashes with other publishers over costs and deadlines had painted him as difficult, while Adams was seen as a dependable tradesman avoiding such conflicts. By mid-September, the unresolved had become a flashpoint, with Adams repeatedly pressing for settlement to cover his own operational expenses. The professional rapport deteriorated further as Colt's refusal to yield highlighted his broader financial woes, including mounting from his and unrelated ventures. The final confrontation unfolded on September 17, 1841, when Adams visited Colt's office at the corner of Chambers Street and Broadway to demand immediate payment. What began as another verbal exchange over the disputed bill quickly intensified, fueled by mutual frustration and accusations of dishonesty, underscoring the breakdown of their business arrangement.

The Killing and Body Disposal

On September 17, 1841, during a heated argument over an outstanding related to costs for Colt's manual, John C. Colt assaulted in his office at 79 Chambers Street in . In a fit of rage, Colt grabbed a nearby —described in contemporary accounts as a double-sided tool combining an axe blade and hammer head—and struck Adams multiple times on the head, inflicting fatal wounds. Adams collapsed and died shortly thereafter, with Colt confirming the death around 2 p.m. Faced with the immediate need to conceal the , Colt began the gruesome process of later that afternoon, working alone in his blood-soaked office for several hours. He used the same to sever the limbs and torso, reducing the body to manageable pieces while attempting to minimize further mess. Colt then stripped the remains of clothing, packed them into a sturdy wooden crate approximately four feet long, and labeled it as containing "books" to avoid suspicion during transport. To further disguise the contents, he sprinkled salt and chloride of lime over the pieces. Colt's disposal plan involved shipping the crate via the steamship Kalamazoo departing from a wharf near Maiden Lane on the East River, bound for New Orleans. He addressed it to the fictitious "Mr. Gross" in New Orleans. For assistance in moving the heavy crate from his office to the dock without drawing attention, Colt enlisted Richard Barstow, a local cartman, who transported it under the pretense of delivering fragile goods. With the shipment underway by evening, Colt sought to evade immediate detection. In the hours following the dispatch, Colt fled to a nearby , where he adopted a rudimentary by altering his appearance and assuming a false name to blend in among transients. He spent the night there, scrubbing his hands and clothing of lingering evidence before planning his next moves.

Arrest and Trial

Capture and Charges

The crate containing Samuel Adams's body was opened on September 25, 1841, aboard the steamship Kalamazoo at the foot of Maiden Lane in after crew members noticed a foul odor emanating from it during a weather delay that prevented the vessel from departing for New Orleans. The remains were badly decomposed but identified as those of the 30-year-old printer through labels on his clothing bearing his name, as well as other personal effects such as keys and a pocketbook found inside the crate. New York City police immediately initiated an investigation, tracing the crate's origin to John C. Colt's bookkeeping and academy at the corner of Chambers Street and Broadway via the shipping manifest and address label. Key witnesses, including cartman Richard Barstow who had transported the heavy box from Colt's building on the morning of September 18 and express agents at the wharf, positively identified Colt as the man who had paid them to load and ship the crate under a false name to a fictitious recipient in New Orleans. Further inquiries at Colt's office revealed scrubbed bloodstains on the floor and signs of a recent struggle, linking the scene directly to Adams's disappearance reported days earlier. Having fled New York shortly after the murder, Colt was apprehended on , 1841, without resistance and transported to prison by officers led by Mayor Robert Hunter Morris. Colt was formally indicted by a in late September 1841 on charges of first-degree murder under New York law for the willful killing of with an ax-hammer during their dispute. Prosecutors argued premeditation based on the body disposal method, and due to evidence of Colt's flight and the gruesome nature of the crime, Recorder Richard Riker denied bail, citing him as a substantial flight risk.

Court Proceedings and Media Sensationalism

The trial of John C. Colt commenced on January 19, 1842, in the New York Court of Oyer and Terminer and concluded on January 31, 1842, under the presidency of Judge . The proceedings unfolded in a highly charged atmosphere, with Colt facing charges of first-degree murder for the death of printer . The prosecution, headed by James R. Whiting, built its case around the argument of premeditation, underscoring Colt's calculated efforts to conceal the crime through the gruesome packaging and shipment of the body. Whiting's team presented witness testimonies and to portray the act as deliberate rather than spontaneous. Colt's defense was mounted by a team of prominent attorneys, including Dudley Selden—a relative and experienced litigator—along with John Morrill and Robert Emmett. Their primary strategy centered on claiming , asserting that Colt acted in during a heated altercation over a dispute, as detailed in his own . To explain the macabre disposal of the body, the lawyers invoked temporary insanity, arguing it clouded Colt's judgment in the immediate aftermath without negating his accountability for the killing itself. This approach sought to humanize Colt while contesting the prosecution's narrative of cold-blooded intent, though it faced scrutiny over inconsistencies in the weapon used—initially an ax-hammer. The trial captivated the public and ignited widespread media , transforming it into one of the era's most notorious spectacles. Newspapers, particularly the New York Herald, published daily dispatches with vivid, dramatic flair, often dubbing the case with inflammatory headlines that amplified its horror and familial intrigue due to Colt's connection to inventor . Such coverage, including special "extra" editions rushed to print, fueled a frenzy among readers, with crowds gathering outside the courtroom and reports speculating on Colt's demeanor and motives. This intense scrutiny raised early ethical concerns about "trial-by-press," as journalists' biased portrayals risked prejudicing the jury and eroding judicial impartiality, a echoed in contemporary analyses of tactics.

Key Evidence and Defense Arguments

The prosecution's case relied heavily on physical evidence recovered from John C. Colt's office and linked to the . An , described as a double-sided tool with an and , was found in Colt's possession and presented as the murder weapon, with traces of blood allegedly matching the victim's injuries. Additionally, materials from the wooden crate used to ship ' body— including wrappings, bindings, and chemicals like salt and chloride of lime for preservation—were traced back to Colt's office supplies and Adams' workspace, establishing a direct connection between Colt and the disposal method. Witness testimonies provided circumstantial support for the timeline and events. Washington van Zandt, an accomplice who assisted Colt in transporting the to the shipping dock, reluctantly testified to observing Colt handling the ax-hammer shortly before the incident and helping load the suspicious box onto the ship Kalamazoo bound for New Orleans, where the body was discovered on , 1841. Neighboring witnesses, including Asa H. Wheeler, a instructor in an adjacent office, and his students such as Arzac Seignette and John Delnous, reported hearing loud arguments and a heavy thud from Colt's room on September 17, 1841, followed by seeing Colt scrubbing the floor and maneuvering a large, heavy downstairs the next day. Caroline Henshaw also testified to noticing strangulation marks on Colt's , which the prosecution used to corroborate a struggle but not to exonerate him. Forensic examination in , typical of early 19th-century practices, involved disinterring Adams' body and displaying the severed in for expert analysis. Physicians testified that the fatal wounds—multiple gashes and a prominent hole in the cranium—were consistent with blows from an ax-hammer's edge, with no evidence of trauma despite some initial speculation; the further noted ligature marks from a around the , aligning with the recovered. The defense, led by attorney Dudley Selden, countered with arguments centered on temporary insanity induced by severe financial stress from Colt's mounting debts and business failures. Colt's own confession, read in court, claimed the killing occurred in a moment of self-defense during a heated dispute over a printing bill, asserting that Adams attacked first by choking him with his necktie, leading Colt to grab the nearby ax-hammer instinctively and strike without premeditation: "The seizing of the hammer and the blow was instantaneous… I only remember of his twisting my neck handkerchief so tight that it seemed to me as though I lost all power of reason." To undermine the prosecution, the defense challenged the chain of custody for the ax-hammer and crate materials, questioning how evidence was handled between discovery and presentation, and argued that the ax-hammer could not be definitively proven as the sole murder weapon due to inconsistencies in wound descriptions and the absence of conclusive blood matching techniques available at the time. Family members, including Colt's brother James B. Colt, supported the insanity claim by referencing hereditary mental instability in the family history.

Verdict and Sentencing

On January 31, 1842, following a that spanned from January 19 to 31, the deliberated and returned a of guilty on the charge of first-degree murder against John C. Colt for the killing of . The deliberation lasted over ten hours, reflecting the contentious nature of the arguments presented by the defense, which many observers found credible but which failed to sway the jurors. Judge sentenced Colt to , with the execution scheduled for November 18, 1842, in accordance with New York law for first-degree convictions at the time. Colt reacted with composure but immediately pursued appeals for a and clemency, enlisting prominent supporters including his brother , though all efforts were denied by the courts. The verdict and sentencing occurred amid heightened public scrutiny, fueled by sensational media coverage of the case and broader societal demands for in an era of rising concerns over and moral reform. Colt's known history of and financial indiscretions contributed to anti-gambling sentiments that colored public perception, potentially influencing the despite the defense's emphasis on key like the ax-hammer and Adams's alleged .

Imprisonment and Death

Life in Prison and Marriage

Following his conviction for murder, John C. Colt was incarcerated in New York's Tombs Prison, a foreboding structure completed in 1838 and notorious for its and harsh, dungeon-like conditions that often led to inmate despair and illness. Despite the general isolation imposed on prisoners, Colt secured a relatively privileged cell through his own resources, affording him improved food, furnishings, and regular visitors, including his brother and the Reverend Henry J. Anthon of St. Mark's Episcopal Church. His days were structured around intellectual pursuits: he devoted time to reading philosophical and literary works, composing letters to supporters, and reflecting in notes on the principles of , which he viewed as a moral framework for personal and societal order even amid his confinement. These routines provided a semblance of normalcy, allowing Colt to revise editions of his seminal textbook, The Science of Double-Entry Book-Keeping, and draft public addresses on the subject during his imprisonment. Colt's romantic life had long been marked by entanglements, including a brief earlier to Caroline Henshaw that some accounts link to his brother , though records confirm her primary partnership with John by 1840. Their relationship originated in New York in 1839, when the teenage Henshaw, a German immigrant of modest means, became Colt's student; he tutored her in English and business skills, fostering a deep personal bond that evolved into by January 1841. By May 1841, she was pregnant with their son, Caldwell Colt, born in January 1842 while Colt awaited trial; Henshaw remained devoted, visiting him frequently in and managing their household affairs externally. The culmination of their union occurred on November 18, 1842, hours before Colt's scheduled execution, when he and Henshaw were married in a brief ceremony within his cell, officiated by Reverend Anthon and witnessed by and a small group of attendants. This unusual prison wedding, granted by authorities despite Colt's impending fate, was motivated by his desire to legitimize their longstanding relationship, secure legal protections for their young son, and offer emotional solace in his final moments; it included a rare one-hour , underscoring the personal stakes amid the institutional constraints.

Suicide and Immediate Aftermath

On November 18, 1842, hours before his scheduled public execution by , John C. Colt committed in his cell at the prison by stabbing himself in the heart with a smuggled to him by one of his final visitors. The act was a deliberate effort to evade the humiliation and pain of , a fate he had repeatedly expressed dread of during his . In letters written shortly before his death, Colt conveyed remorse for the murder of while staunchly defending his mental soundness, arguing that the crime stemmed from a momentary loss of control rather than inherent madness. Earlier that day, Colt had married his longtime companion, Caroline Henshaw, in a brief ceremony attended by family members, including his brother . At approximately 3:55 p.m. on the day of his death, a guard discovered Colt's body on his bed, surrounded by blood, prompting an immediate alert to officials. The scheduled execution was abruptly canceled, and Colt's family was promptly notified of the tragedy, though details of their private response remain sparse in contemporary accounts. Coinciding with the discovery, a erupted in the jail, fueling initial confusion and whispers among staff. A coroner's swiftly convened and officially ruled Colt's death a , confirming the self-inflicted nature of the wound based on the scene and the smuggled . The public, which had anticipated a sensational as the climax to one of the year's most notorious trials, expressed widespread disappointment over the denied spectacle, with newspapers lamenting the loss of a dramatic conclusion to the case. Rumors proliferated that Colt's influential connections had orchestrated an escape, though the findings quelled most such speculation in official circles.

Legacy and Cultural Impact

Contributions to Accountancy

John C. Colt's primary contribution to accountancy was his authorship of The Science of Double-Entry Book-Keeping, Simplified, Arranged and Methodized After the Forms of Grammar and Arithmetic, first published in 1838, which became one of the most successful bookkeeping textbooks in early American education. The text emphasized the systematic application of double-entry principles, presenting them through grammatical and arithmetic analogies to make the method accessible to students, and included practical forms for commercial transactions. By 1841, it had been adopted by over 260 schools across the United States, including 17 of the 23 seminaries in New York City, demonstrating its widespread integration into curricula. The textbook's longevity is evidenced by at least 46 editions and printings issued between 1838 and 1855, published in major cities such as , New York, , and , with later editions incorporating Colt's public addresses that advocated for the formal study of . These addresses, included starting from the 10th edition in 1844, promoted as a universal science essential for and , arguing for its inclusion in curricula to reduce errors and enhance commercial efficiency compared to single-entry methods. Colt's work played a key role in elevating from a mere clerical to a recognized in the United States, predating more formal academic treatments by figures like Charles Ezra Sprague by several decades and influencing early in private academies and correspondence courses. In modern accounting histories, Colt's is cited for its pioneering scholarly examination of double-entry principles in the American context, with scholars noting its philosophical depth and practical illustrations as foundational to the discipline's development. For instance, it is referenced in analyses of 19th-century for bridging European traditions with U.S. commercial needs, though quantitative data on exact adoptions remains limited beyond contemporary reports. While Colt's personal scandal often overshadowed his achievements, his professional legacy endures through these historical recognitions, underscoring the text's role in standardizing practices amid America's industrial expansion.

Depictions in Literature and Media

John C. Colt's sensational 1841 murder of printer and the subsequent trial captured widespread public attention in 19th-century America, inspiring numerous depictions in and print media. The gruesome details of the crime—particularly Colt's attempt to ship Adams's dismembered body in an oblong crate to New Orleans—fueled tabloid-style reporting in New York newspapers such as the Herald and the Sun, which sensationalized the case as a symbol of urban decadence and failed ambition among the elite. These accounts portrayed Colt as a brooding intellectual whose scholarly pursuits in accountancy masked a volatile temper, contributing to a cultural of American success tainted by moral decay. The case directly influenced early , most notably Edgar Allan Poe's 1844 "The Oblong Box," which scholars attribute in part to the macabre shipping incident. In Poe's tale, a grieving obsessively guards a mysterious box aboard a ship bound for New York, echoing the discovery of Adams's remains and reflecting broader 19th-century anxieties about hidden violence in polite . Similarly, Herman alluded to the Colt trial in his 1853 novella "," where the passive scrivener's Wall Street isolation and demise evoke Colt's own scholarly detachment and tragic end, underscoring themes of alienation in a burgeoning commercial America. True-crime pamphlets proliferated in the wake of the trial, including "Trial of John C. Colt for the Murder of " (1842) and "An Authentic Life of John C. Colt" (1842), which dramatized the proceedings and Colt's defense of temporary to a voracious readership hungry for moral lessons on ambition and retribution. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Colt's story has been revisited in true-crime narratives that link his downfall to his brother Colt's legacy of firearm innovation, portraying the siblings as emblems of American ingenuity twisted by violence. Harold Schechter's 2006 book Killer Colt: Murder, Disgrace, and the Making of an American Legend interweaves John's with Samuel's rise, emphasizing how the trial's media frenzy shaped early and influenced writers like Poe and Melville while highlighting Colt as a cautionary figure of unchecked ambition. M. William Phelps's 2012 work The Devil's Right Hand: The Tragic Story of the Colt Curse further explores this fraternal contrast, framing John's on the eve of execution as a dark to Samuel's industrial triumphs and perpetuating myths of a "curse" tied to guns and violence. Modern media adaptations include episodes, such as the 2022 "One Nation Under Crime" series installment on the Colt-Adams trial, which delves into the psychological and societal implications, reinforcing Colt's enduring role as a symbol of the perils of 19th-century entrepreneurial excess.

References

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