Clarence A. Glass was a son of a prominent family in Rains County
and was active in many areas of his community. Yet, someone ruthlessly
took his life one winter night in 1916 in what was apparently a robbery
of the First State Bank at Point. The case remains unsolved eighty-four
years later.
Clarence was repeatedly lauded by his fellow citizens.
As a teenager, his name appeared in the 1904 "Roll of Honor" for Emory
Public School of those pupils who had regular attendance, good deportment,
and a close application to study. His wedding announcement in April
1909 described him as "a promising young man with exemplary habits."
A few years later, in 1911, Clarence was entrusted with the responsibility
of being an agent for the Katy Railroad in Emory. In 1912 he served
ably as Rains County Clerk. He also served as an officer during the
latter half of 1912 in the esteemed I.O.O.F. Lodge (Independent Order of
Odd Fellows) in Emory. In early 1916 Mr. Glass made the fateful decision
to change vocations...a decision that would cost him his life just eleven
months later.
"In our last week's issue we noted that Mr. C.A. Glass had been
offered the cashiership of the First State Bank at Point; we can state
now that he has accepted the place, rolled up his sleeves and gone to work.
Mr. Glass is a fine young businessman, a good citizen; and we regret to
lose him and his estimable wife as citizens of our little city but join
with friends in wishing them abundant success in their new field of labor
and glad that we are not to lose them from the county." (The Rains
County Leader, January 21, 1916)
Clarence moved with his wife to Point the last of January 1916.
(The Rains County Leader, January 29, 1916) Yet at the same time,
the people from his hometown of Emory still sought his involvement in their
affairs as shown when he was chosen to serve as a Director of The First
National Bank of Emory along with other leaders of the community.
"The First National Bank of Emory held its annual stockholders
meeting here Wednesday night. Out-of-town stockholders in attendance
were Messrs. F.J. Phillips, C.B. Jones and J.B. Clayton of Greenville and
W.A. Fitzgerald of the Elm community. Directors elected were F.J.
Phillips, C.B. Jones, W.A. Fitzgerald, C.B. Johnson, T.N. Tackett, E.L.
Allen, C.A. Glass, S.K. McCallon and O.H. Rodes. (The Rains County
Leader, January 29, 1916)
Apparently Clarence Glass had every intention of settling for
many years in Point and serving the First State Bank because just six weeks
after moving to Point it was noted in the local paper that "W.Y. Adams
has bought the C.A. Glass residence on Planters street, the consideration
being $1500. Mr. Adams is having another room and a gallery added
and will occupy the property himself when completed." (The Rains
County Leader, March 3, 1916)
"On the night of Thursday, December 7, at approximately 9:00
p.m. Clarence Glass, cashier of the First State Bank, was working at his
desk, writing letters in his office at the bank when an unknown assailant
noiselessly entered the unlocked doors. The intruder forced him to
empty the cash drawers that contained about $240 and attempted to force
Mr. Glass to open the safe within the vault. After three futile attempts
to open the timed lock, the gunman ordered Mr. Glass to turn his back and
throw up his hands. The gunman then pumped him with steel bullets
from an automatic pistol. The first shot entered the body near the
collar button (of his shirt) and felled the cashier; two succeeding shots
entered his back near the left lung and in his left arm. Cashier
Glass crawled some three hundred yards to the nearest home, that of Constable
Will Thornton. Mr. Thornton assisted the fatally wounded Mr. Glass
to his own home. Physicians were summoned. It was thought,
at first, that the young man would, but the flow of blood could not be
checked and just six hours later, Mr. Glass died early in the morning hours
at 3:00 a.m. on Friday, December 8. Before he died, Clarence Glass
made the statement,
"The party entered the door and was at my side before I knew
anyone was near. The party was dressed in a gray colored suit, was
some five and one half feet tall and rather heavy built. He was masked
with a brown mask of some sort, stated he had come for the money in the
bank, and ordered me to hand the same over to him. I told him the
safe was time-locked and he requested what money there was in the drawers,
which amounted to $240; this amount he ordered, at the point of a gun,
wrapped and tied up for him and his orders were obeyed. The robber
left the bank by the front door of the bank, and immediately the buzz of
an auto was heard." The Lone Oak News issued an extra edition at
2:30 p.m. on Friday, December 8, headlining and detailing the tragic event."
(reprinted in The Rains County Leader, March 29, 1979)
"State Bank Examiner Curry arrived at the scene of the crime
early the next morning. His theory was that the robber was evidently
an amateur, else he would not have pressed his request for Mr. Glass to
open the safe door, being time-locked. The only clue to the combination
bank robbery and murder at the time was a report as witnessed by several
Point citizens, that on Thursday afternoon, a Negro man and a white man
had driven into Point in a car. The Negro left the car, walked over
to the front of the bank, viewed the situation, and returned to the auto
to hold a consultation with his companion. He then returned to the
bank, walking along the north side of the building. After a second
consultation, both parties walked to the front of the bank where they talked
and then returned to their car and left. This same automobile was
seen passing east of Point about 10:00 p.m. Thursday night. A posse
from Lone Oak and Point joined the Rains County law officials in a manhunt
for a man wearing a gray suit and carrying a small satchel, who had reportedly
been seen walking near the McLeroy farm east of Point early Friday morning."
(reprinted in The Rains County Leader, March 29, 1979)
Even in death Clarence's name and character were valued highly, as
shown by the public statement made by Virgil Williams of Point:
"I should feel derelict to a sacred obligation
did I not add this last word to the valued memory of my martyred friend,
Clarence Glass. Than whom no son of Rains County soil has more deservedly
won the title: 'A good man'. Towering high in the estimation of the
best citizenship of the country, he grew from childhood to manhood.
Acquitting himself with integrity while employed at the First National
Bank of Emory, he won the business confidence of the patrons, as well as
the love and business fellowship of Cashier McCallon and son. His
new field of labor and profitably practiced in shaping the policies of
the First State Bank of Point for 1916. The short year spent in this
latter position was probably the most active year of his useful life, having
the care and responsibilities of an institution struggling to pull itself
out of the business reverses of two hard crop years. We mourn him
because he was faithful unto death.
Virgil Williams, Point, Texas, Dec. 31, 1916"
(The Rains County Leader, January 12, 1917)
---To be continued next week: Detective's report
"Mr. R.P. Etter of Lone Oak, Clarence Glass' father-in-law, immediately
hired special detectives from Dallas and Houston to work on the case.
Expense was no object. A reward was offered by Mr. Etter as well
as citizens of Point and Lone Oak." (reprinted in The Rains County
Leader, March 29, 1979)
P.R. Schumacher, detective and manager of the Burns National
Detective Agency of Dallas visited Point the morning of December 8, the
day after the crime was committed and made a thorough investigation of
said crime, and reported the following facts and circumstances in connection
therewith:
He endeavored to get in touch with the officials of the bank
at Point where the crime was committed; he did get in touch with Cashier
Dunn and made arrangements to meet the president of the Bank later.
He had Mr. Dunn open the vault; he made an examination of the vault, and
with some measurements, found it to be five by four feet. Mr. Dunn
told him that a number of people had visited the vault. Detective
Schumacher then examined the shelving of the bank and found a deposit box
with a bullet hole in it, which he laid back in order to have witnesses
to the opening of the box. In the presence of Mr. Bowers and Mr.
Dunn, Detective Schumacher opened the box and found a bullet in perfect
condition, that appeared to be an ordinary 38 caliber bullet. The
bullet had gone through the box and some papers that appeared to be deeds
to land or something of that kind; however, the bullet was in perfect condition,
and in going through the man killed, it possibly turned and hit the box
in that way. Detective Schumacher's opinion was that the bullet was
fired from an ordinary 38 caliber Smith & Wesson cartridge that was
used in a cheap gun, the old black barrel system, or the old time revolving
system. He, together with said Dunn and Bowers, put the bullet back
in the box.
Detective Schumacher and Mr. Boyd had the bullet weighed and
then secured different calibers. Mr. Boyd had the balls removed from
the different guns and those bullets were weighed. The one that came
out of the box weighed exactly 146 grains. Prior to going over to
the bank, Detective Schumacher and Mr. Boyd, together with Mr. Will Thornton,
Mr. Rucker, Claud Branch and Joe Humphreys, were in the hotel and carefully
examined a gun that had been taken from another party suspected of this
crime; that gun was a five shot, black barrel or cylinder Ivery Johnson
revolver. On examining it, Detective Schumacher found that four cylinders
had been discharged recently; and that the gun had been discharged prior
to that but never re-cleaned. Three of these chambers appeared that
the shells had been recently exploded, and the fourth showed that it had
been exploded sometime prior to the three. From Detective Schumacher's
knowledge of firearms, it appeared that the three fresh shells had been
fired recently. Detective Schumacher also found one chamber of the
gun that had not been exploded at all, not since it had been cleaned.
Detective Schumacher then secured cartridges with bullets in them from
the home of another party suspected of this crime, being the same party
to whom the gun here referred to belonged. He weighed the bullets
from the cartridges so secured; the one which he found in the box in the
bank and these cartridges weighed identically the same. From his
knowledge of guns, Detective Schumacher concluded that a 38-caliber ordinary
Smith & Wesson cartridge would fit and shoot in an Ivory Johnson pistol
of the kind and character that belonged to and was found in the possession
of the other party suspected of this crime; but a 38-caliber ordinary Smith
& Wesson cartridge would not fit and shoot in a 38-caliber Colts revolver,
which was the kind of revolver found in the possession of the defendant
at the time he was arrested in Alexandria, La. and taken from this defendant
by one, W.A. Boyd.
Detective Schumacher then made an investigation of some tracks
leading from the bank at Point where the crime was committed, through some
fields leading toward the home of the other party suspected of committing
this crime. He, together with Mr. Will Thornton, walked from the
rear of the bank at Point to a road which runs parallel with the bank building
at about 60 yards from the bank and entered a corn field. About 300
yards from the bank, the footprints commenced in the light sandy loam of
the cotton field and were plainly visible. Detective Schumacher then
secured the shoes worn by the other party suspected of this crime on the
day of the murder; the shoes which were cheap rubber sole tennis shoes
or slippers, fitted the tracks found in the cotton field exactly.
The tracks, where they first started, showed to be a pretty good distance
apart and showed all the appearance of the steps of a man running; after
these tracks had continued some distance, they showed that the man had
stopped and turned around and looked back, and from then on the tracks
had the appearance of a man walking.
Detective Schumacher then interviewed the other party suspected
of this crime and questioned him very closely as to where he had been and
his whereabouts on the day of the crime. This party had told the
Detective that he came to town early that day and had remained in Point
all that day and that he attended the Holy-Roller meeting that evening
in Point and remained until the services were over and then went home,
going a different route than the one where the tracks were found that his
shoes fitted. This party told Detective Schumacher he had visited
Point nearly every day that week before the crime was committed.
In the course of the investigation, the other party suspected stated to
Detective Schumacher that he had the Ivory Johnson 38-caliber pistol in
his possession, that he bought it from some young fellow there in Point,
or had borrowed it and was going to buy it, if it suited him, but that
he had not intended to buy it. The other party suspected of this
crime first denied that he had the pistol in question, but later stated
that he had it at home hanging behind a picture and that he had taken it
out and shot it a few times. After interviewing the other party suspected
of this crime, Detective Schumacher visited the house or home where such
party was then living, which was within a few miles of Point and there
talked with the man and wife of the home where the other party suspected
of this crime resided. Detective Schumacher was informed by them
that the other party suspected of this crime had returned home from Point
on the night of the crime at some time between 10:00 and 11:00 pm. that
night. When the other party suspected of the crime came home that
night, he had inquired of the man and wife at said place if they were asleep,
and to which they replied, "No"; after ascertaining that they were still
awake, he remarked to them that he had remained in Point later than usual
on that night on account of attending the Holy-Roller church or meeting.
The wife of the party at whose residence the other party also suspected
of the crime was living then told Detective Schumacher that she noticed
on the morning after the crime was committed a bad scratch on the left
ear of the other party suspected, and that she had asked him how this scratch
occurred. He had replied that he had scratched his ear on a barbed
wire fence that he was getting through on his way home from the Holy-Roller
meeting.
The wife of this man first told Detective Schumacher that she
supposed the other party suspected of this crime had left the Ivory Johnson
pistol in question at home on the morning of the day the crime was committed
and did not take it to Point with him on that day. However, after
the Detective had left the house and gone several hundred yards therefrom,
the man of the house came and called him back to the house again.
Then the wife of this man said that the other party suspected of this crime
did in fact take the pistol here in question away with him that morning
when he left the house for Point. In leaving the house that morning,
he had remarked he was going to leave Point. When she asked him if
he really meant what he said, he replied, "Sure I do." while at the same
time waving this pistol over his head out on the gallery in her presence,
and remarking, "See my gun?" She then saw him replace the pistol in his
inside coat pocket and walk away in the direction of Point.
After having the conversation with this man and wife at whose
house the other party suspected of this crime was then living, Detective
Schumacher immediately went and interviewed the other party suspected of
this crime and inquired of him about this pistol. The other party
at first denied leaving the house at all with the pistol; but that after
having been questioned by the Detective for some three-quarters of an hour,
he admitted that he did have the pistol in his possession when he left
the house on Thursday morning, the day of the murder, but stated that he
had hidden the pistol under a tree at the edge of the farm where he was
living, and that he then came on to Point, without it He stated that
he had returned home directly after the Holy-Roller meeting but could never
explain just when he had taken the pistol from under the tree and re-placed
it at home.
This same other party suspected of this crime was arrested in
Dallas, Texa, or apprehended by officers on or about the 2nd day of July
1917 in connection with this crime, and in the presence of Detective Schumacher
there was found upon his person a purse containing a large number of nickels.
On this occasion in Dallas, Detective Schumacher asked the other party
suspected of this crime what he had done with a certain grip that he had
left Point with; the other party suspected replied, "I gave it to a friend
in Greenville." The other party suspected could not or would not give the
name of the "friend in Greenville" that he had given the grip to.
(Rains County District Court trial file)
To be continued next week : The arrest
The Arrests
A notice addressed to any Sheriff of any state was issued on December
12, 1916, less than a month from the date of the crime and murder, and
commanded the arrest of J.W. Bergen. The man named Bergen was captured
in Alexandria, Louisiana, and brought to Rains County on Christmas Day
to stand trial; he w"The deliberations of the Grand Jury are always secret,
and on what evidence they returned this indictment we do not know, but
we are informed at the Sheriff's office that Bergen has made no effort
yet to get ut on bond, which could only be accomplished by an examining
trial, and it is generally supposed that he will be kept in jail until
the next term of District Court, which will be in May. He was charged
with the murder of Clarence Glass on December 7, 1916; the charge read
"Grand Jurors present that J.W. Bergen on the 7th of December in 1916 with
force and arms did unlawfully and with malice aforethought kill and murder
C.A. Glass by then and there shooting said C.A. Glass with a pistol; said
murder being committed by said J.W. Bergen while he, the said J.W. Bergen,
was then and there engaged in the perpetration of the offense of robbery
by the use of firearms." Judge Pierson ordered J.W. Bergen transferred
to Hunt County jail for safe keeping and Sheriff Whittle carried him to
Greenville on January 4, 1917. (The Rains County Leader, January
5, 1917)
The following week "L.L. Browning and C.D. Doleman, druggists,
and P. Engle, a clothing dealer, all of Mineola, were in Emory to go before
the Grand Jury in connection with the Glass murder case. They were
supposed to try to identify the man, Burgen, who was brought here from
Louisiana." (The Rains County Leader, January 5, 1917)
Later in January 1917, "officers carried J.W. Bergen to Dallas
last week to have him 'mugged'. Bergen is being held at Greenville
for the murder of C.A. Glass at Point, and the word 'mugged' means taking
his picture. There are no new developments in this case, so far as
we can find out." (The Rains County Leader, February 2, 1917)
Mr. Bergen was indicted by the Rains County Grand Jury soon after his arrest.
However, Mr. Bergen claimed to be innocent of the crime for which
he was charged. "It has become known that the man Bergen, who was
placed in jail here following his indictment by a Rains County Grand Jury
charging him with the killing of Cashier Glass and the robbing of the State
Bank of Point, is seeking to establish an alibi. It is understood
that he claims that he ate breakfast with a crew of the Interstate Commerce
Commission at Peelers, near the line of Texas and Louisiana on the morning
of the murder, and it is claimed if this be true he could not have been
in Point that night. It is also understood that the crew differs
as to the date some man ate with them, but that Bergen is the man cannot
be said at present. Bergen is reticent about himself and his life.
He says nothing to persons in and about the jail and nothing is known of
what he expects to set up in his own behalf when his trial comes on.----Greenville
Banner" (The Rains County Leader, February 9, 1917)
In May 1917, a special term was called for the District Court
and Grand Jury to deliberate the facts. T.N. Tackett, owner of the
firm Tackett & Allen in Emory, serving as foreman of the Grand Jury,
reported, "We have been investigating every clue we could find relating
to the robbery of the Point bank and the assassination of Mr. Glass, the
cashier of the bank, but we have been unable up to the present time to
complete our investigations along that line and we believe a special term
of the District Court should be called for completing the investigation
we have begun." (The Rains County Leader, May 25, 1917) The
verdict of the Grand Jury was rendered one week later and printed in the
June 1, 1917 issue of The Rains County Leader, noting that suspicion had
arisen as to the possibility of the crime having been committed by a "local"
person; their report stated, "We, your Grand Jury for the Special Term
in Rains County, Texas, submit to you the following report stated: We have
been sitting six days and have worked out every proposition that had any
bearing on the murder of Clarence Glass at Point, Texas, which has resulted
under the developments of clarifying suspicion as regards the perpetration
of it by a local person. While we have no positive evidence to convict
any person; yet we have developed some circumstances, which may be worked
out in a more satisfactory way in the future. In presenting to you
this report of our efforts, while we return no bill of our own, yet we
do not find it expedient to undo or interfere with the finding of the previous
Grand Jury. In sifting out every possible chance of information touching
this matter, we regret the necessity of incurring a heavier expense than
we would have liked, but, believing the enormity of the crime justified
every method we have employed, we have no fears of criticism. We
have taken all testimony in writing, making it slow and tedious, yet we
now have a permanent record of it all, which should be of value in further
procedure and save time and expense. During this special session,
we have examined 54 witnesses and the above is the result of our investigations.
We now make this our final report and beg that we may be discharged.
With high esteem and respect for your honor, we are yours sincerely, T.N.
Tackett, Foreman"
"J.W. Burgen, the man arrested in Louisiana on charge of killing
Clarence Glass at Point and robbing the bank there was allowed bail in
the sum of $5,000 by Judge Pierson. The case was transferred from
Emory to Greenville by Judge Pierson. ---Greenville Messenger" (The
Rains County Leader, June 15, 1917)
One week later the LEADER reported that "Yesterday Sheriff Akers
found a bar partly sawed in two in the cell in which he keeps the prisoners
at jail. It appears that Deputy King got an inkling that something
was not going right in the regular routine, perhaps some noise which sounded
like an attempt to get away. This led the Sheriff to investigate
closely and he found the bar partly sawed away. There were two prisoners
concerned in this attempt to get out, Charley Southwick, charged with pandering,
and J.W. Bergen charged with the murder of Clarence Glass at Point last
December. The sawing was done with tobacco cans which were mashed
together and notched and a case knife which had been taken in with a dinner
a few days ago. The work of getting out was slow but for vigilance
it could have been accomplished after a time." (The Rains County
Leader, June 22, 1917)
One month later in July 1916, another suspect was arrested in
the murder case of Clarence Glass. "Will Thornton of Point brought
Charley Carter, whose arrest was reported at Dallas last week, to Emory
Tuesday evening to have him put in jail but Sheriff WHittle refused to
receive him. We were informed by Deputy Bevers that it was because
his arrest was not considered legal. Thornton carried Carter back
to Point the same eveing where he was held until Wednesday morning.
SHeriff WHittle, Judge Rabb and Attorney Shipp went to Point Wednesday
where an examining trial was to be conducted, but for some reason it was
postponed for a week, and the officers went to Dallas, carrying Carter
with them, to make a search for the latter's grip." (The Rains County
Leader, July 13, 1917)
Constable Rucker brought Charley Carter down last Friday evening,
arrested on new evidence developed in the Glass murder case and had him
placed in jail to await his examining trial before ‘Squire Rushing, set
for Thursday of this week. Ex-District Attorney Clyde Sweeton and
Ex-Judge R.L. Porter were the prosecuting attorneys in the case and Judge
Shipp of Emory represented the defense. Through a message from Point
on Thursday evening at 2:30 o'clock the LEADER was informed that the trial
was just beginning, and it was not thought that it would be finished before
some time Friday. (The Rains County Leader, July 20, 1917)
"Charlie Carter, whose examining trial was conducted at Point
last Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, resulted in the defendant being granted
bail in the sum of $5,000. He is charged with the murder of C.A.
Glass, cashier of the Point State Bank last December. The bond was
filed yesterday morning with Rufe Carter, R.M. Pollard, J.M. White and
L.J. King as sureties." (The Rains County Leader, July 27, 1917)
No further record of proceedings concerning Charlie Carter have been located.
Mr. Bergen was tried in May 1918.
(Source: The Rains County Leader and Rains County District Court trial file)
cont'd - next week: The Witnesses