The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

Legal Studies Forum
Volume 17, Number 2 (1993)
reprinted by permission Legal Studies Forum

The Story of Jason Fairbanks:
Trial Reports and the Rise of Sentimental Fiction

DANIEL A. COHEN*
Florida International University

     The story of the rise of American sentimental fiction at the end of the
eighteenth century has often been told. The first American novel, William Hill
Brown's The Power of Sympathy, appeared in Boston in 1789. America's first
great sentimental best-seller, Susanna Rawson's Charlotte Temple, was originally
published in England in 1791 and first reprinted in the United States in 1794.
In all, more than thirty novels by American authors were published in the
United States between 1789 and 1800, with hundreds more during the decades
that followed. That early blossoming of American sentimental fiction has been
ably chronicled by such prominent literary historians as Alexander Cowie,
James Hart, Herbert Brown, and, more recently, Cathy Davidson. All of those
scholars have emphasized the controversial character of early sentimental
novels, describing how conservative moralists of the day condemned such
fiction as tending to overstimulate the imaginations and corrupt the morals of
their predominantly young and female readers. Cathy Davidson has further
argued that early sentimental novels were a subversive genre that empowered
women and young people in a still patriarchal and age-stratified society.1
     In contrast to the considerable scholarly attention that has been paid to
the rise of sentimental fiction, cultural historians have virtually ignored the
nearly contemporaneous rise of criminal trial reports as a popular genre, both
as features in newspapers and as separate pamphlets or larger volumes. Most
early trial reports closely followed the actual order of trial proceedings, includ-
ing the indictment, opening arguments, testimony of witnesses, closing argu-
ments, judge's charge, verdict, and sentence. They ranged in thoroughness from
relatively brief synopses of courtroom proceedings to complete transcriptions
of entire trials, sometimes running to two hundred or more pages in length.
A few may have been published primarily for the use of judges and lawyers but
most were clearly designed for a popular lay audience. Although only occasion-
ally produced during the colonial period, trial reports began appearing with
greater frequency in New York and Philadelphia during the 1790s and in New
England during the following decade. Thus trial reports had already become
a popular American genre several decades before the rise of cheap, urban
mass-circulation newspapers - the so-called "penny press" - during the 1830s
and 1840s.2

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     Both sentimental novels and trial reports of the late eighteenth and 
early nineteenth centuries often dealt with the interrelated themes of illicit
sexuality, sexual violence, and violent death. In fact, by the early nineteenth
century, the public discourse of crime - both in newspapers and in courtrooms
- sometimes drew heavily upon the language and motifs of sentimental fiction
as a way of framing and explaining social violence, especially violence directed
by men against women. This essay will examine that intermingling of law,
journalism, and sentimentality by exploring the highly-publicized case of Jason
Fairbanks, a young man from Dedham, Massachusetts, who was convicted of
murdering his sweetheart in 1801.3 Through a close look at a report of Fair-
banks's trial and at other published responses to the case, I will suggest how the
authoritative discourses of law and journalism helped legitimize the birth of a
sentimental culture.
     At the outset, it might be helpful to identify the trial report that pro-
vides the basis for much of what follows. The Boston publishing firm of
Russell and Cutler issued their Report of the Trial of Jason Fairbanks in Septem-
ber 1801, within a day or two of Fairbanks's execution. It runs to eighty-seven
pages, consisting of verbatim transcripts of trial testimony; third-person synop-
ses of lawyers' arguments; detailed summaries of the charge, verdict, and sen-
tence; and supplementary accounts of the prisoner's escape, recapture, and
execution. The compilation appeared in at least four editions within a period
of several months, making it the first demonstrably popular trial report pub-
lished in early national New England. Readers interested in a more detailed
discussion of Russell and Cutler's Report and of the various other pamphlets
and broadsides on the Fairbanks case can consult my new book on New Eng-
land crime literature, from which this essay is largely drawn.4
      One afternoon in the spring of 1801, at about the time that Thomas
Jefferson was taking over the presidency from John Adams, Herman Mann, the
editor of a weekly newspaper issued in Dedham Massachusetts, was called to
the scene of a local tragedy. He would describe the affair at length in the next
issue of his paper, under the headline: "MELANCHOLY CATASTROPHE!"
According to Mann's account, Jason Fairbanks and Elizabeth Fales, two young
Dedham residents of respectable families, had been engaged in a long but
frustrated courtship. On the afternoon of Monday, May 18, 1801, the couple
met by agreement at a thicket of birch trees not far from the Fales residence in
order to reach some resolution. Sometime later, at about three o'clock, Fair-
banks appeared at the Fales house, covered with blood, holding a knife, an-
nouncing that Elizabeth had killed herself and that he had tried to do the same.
When the girl's relatives rushed to the grove of birches, they found Elizabeth
lying on the ground with her throat cut and her body lacerated by multiple
stab wounds; the young woman died after "a few struggles and gasps." As for

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Jason, he was not much better off, with a cut throat and various other knife
wounds. The following morning, Mann reported that Fairbanks was "still alive,
but in a most deplorable situation."5
     In covering the untimely death of Elizabeth Fales, Herman Mann did
not simply provide an objective statement of the facts in the case. Rather, he
laced his account with language suggestive of the sentimental fiction that had
begun to flood the United States during the previous ten or twenty years. The
editor described the murder scene as "tragic," "melancholy," and "heart rend-
ing"; referred to his own report on the matter as a "sympathetic effusion"; and
suggested that the event would evoke the "'sympathizing grief of every one
susceptible of the passions of humanity." He concluded by inviting readers to
join in sentimental lamentation: "Ye who have experienced, or learned from
your natural sympathy - come, and with me, drop a tear." Mann himself was
clearly attuned to the emerging "cult of sensibility" and assumed that at least
some of his readers were as well.6
     Although Jason Fairbanks barely survived his own multiple stab
wounds, he was brought to trial in August before the Supreme Court of Massa-
chusetts on the charge of murdering Elizabeth Fales. So many spectators of
both sexes flocked to the trial at Dedham that the judges were forced to move
the proceedings from the usual courthouse chamber to a nearby meetinghouse.
James Sullivan, the Republican attorney general of Massachusetts, handled the 
prosecution; Harrison Gray Otis and John Lowell, Jr., two prominent Federal-
ist lawyers, stood for the defense. Otis was one of the most famous of the
so-called Young Federalists. In other words, he was part of a younger genera-
tion of Federalist politicians who were willing to copy the popular political
tactics of the Jeffersonian Republicans. As we shall now see, Otis was also
quite willing to copy the popular literary tactics of sentimental authors.7
     During the trial, witnesses provided the jury with a detailed picture of
the background and immediate circumstances of the tragedy. The two princi-
pals were Jason Fairbanks, a sickly young man of about twenty-one years of age
with a crippled arm, and Elizabeth (or Betsey) Fales, a healthy young woman
of about eighteen. The pair had been courting, at least sporadically, over a
period of several years, despite Jason's poor health and the opposition of
Betsey's family and friends. At times Fairbanks became frustrated by the
situation; witnesses testified that he had made threats against both Betsey and
her mother. Still, the couple often met together at the Fairbanks's residence,
at the houses of friends, and out-of-doors, occasionally spending the night
together alone. Although members of the Fales family denied it under oath,
other witnesses, particularly young acquaintances, testified that Jason and a
Betsey's attachment seemed strong and mutual.8

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     On Sunday, May 17, the day before the tragedy, Jason's niece playfully
forged a marriage certificate for Fairbanks and Fales. That same day Jason told
a friend, Reuben Farrington, that he "planned to meet Betsey, in order to have
the matter settled," explaining that he "either intended to violate her chastity,
or carry her to Wrentham [a nearby town], to be married, for he had waited
long enough." Farrington saw Fairbanks twice the next morning; Jason seemed
"cheerful, and merry as usual," but claimed to be too weak to help him with
some gardening. At one-thirty that afternoon, Fairbanks told Farrington that
he would let him know in about an hour what he had decided to do about his
courtship.9
     In the meantime, Betsey Fales had spent Monday morning helping with
household chores. Both her mother and sister claimed that she too had ap-
peared "cheerful and merry as usual." After drinking some milk for lunch, she
went between twelve and one o'clock to a neighbor's house to retrieve a novel,
entitled Julia Mandeville. She stayed there for a bit more than an hour, amusing
herself by reading the book, a melodramatic piece of British fiction that cli-
maxed with the sudden and tragic deaths of two young lovers who had been
engaged to be married. After laying the novel aside, Betsey played for a few
minutes with a little child and left. At about three o'clock, two of her friends
repeatedly heard Betsey Fales's voice coming from some nearby woods; at first,
one thought she was laughing, but later both thought they heard cries of
distress. Fifteen minutes later, they learned that Betsey was dead.10
     All of the circumstances surrounding the discovery of Betsey Fales in
the birch grove confirmed that Jason Fairbanks had been with her at the time
she received her mortal wounds. Fairbanks himself directed her relatives to the
spot where she lay. In his hand was the bloody jack-knife with which both of
them had been wounded. Witnesses found Jason's overcoat and wallet near
Betsey's body, along with fragments of the marriage certificate that Jason's
niece had given him the previous day. Although Jason's claim that Betsey had
committed suicide was excluded from trial testimony, it seemed clear that she
had either taken her own life or been murdered by Fairbanks.11
     Lawyers on both sides sought to resolve the issue in their favor by
marshalling evidence concerning Betsey's wounds and Jason's physical condi-
tion. The prosecutor, Sullivan, insisted that Betsey could not possibly have
inflicted the more than a dozen knife wounds on her throat, arms, breasts, side,
and even back - the one on the back was a particular problem for the defense.
On the other hand, the defense lawyers insisted that the crippled and sickly
Fairbanks, with a shrunken right arm that was completely stiff at the elbow -
and who reportedly needed his mother's help simply to put on his clothes
every morning - could not possibly have subdued the healthy and athletic
Betsey Fales.12

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     Because much of the testimony and evidence was actually contradictory
and inconclusive, both the prosecutor and the defense lawyers chose to present
imaginative reconstructions of what might have happened in the grove of
birches in order to try to sway the jury. It is noteworthy that those recon-
structions sounded a great deal like scenes from contemporary fiction. The 
scenario sketched by Harrison Gray Otis, one of the defense lawyers, centered
on his portrait of Betsey Fales as a passionate young woman whose head was
"filled with melancholy romances and legendary tales." She was, in short, very
much like those misguided and corrupted female readers described by conserva-
tive critics of sentimental fiction. Otis further suggested that Betsey had been
driven to despair by her love for Jason, a young man whose courtship was
opposed by her parents and whose health was too fragile to allow him to
support her himself against her parents wishes. Finally, amid the grove of
birches, realizing the hopelessness of their courtship, Betsey had frantically
seized Jason's knife and taken her own life.13 Significantly, Otis sought to
bolster the credibility of his version of events by invoking the authority not of
law but of literature:
This is his simple tale - Is it impossible? Is it improbable? Has disap-
pointed love never produced despair? Has despair never induced Sui-
cide? Has the softer sex been peculiarly exempt from these feelings 
and these results?
No - Every annal, and every novel writer will establish the assertion,
that no passion has so often terminated fatally as love, and no circum-
stances have so frequently given it a fatal direction as injudicious re-
straint.14
     Otis then tried to clinch his case by sketching a vignette that might
easily have been extracted from a contemporary romance; the key prop in his
little melodrama was the forged marriage certificate, itself a "fiction" of sorts,
whose fragments had been found at the scene of the crime:
When their conversation turned upon their future prospects, and the
small hopes which they entertained of a happy union, Jason produced
this certificate, and after relating the history of its origin, with a desper-
ate and melancholy look, correspondent to their feelings, he observed,
"I fear we shall never be nearer to the gratification of our fond expecta
tions; I fear that this little fiction is the highest consummation of our
bliss, which we shall ever realize;" and tearing in pieces the scroll on
which their names were united, "thus, said he, our tenderest hopes are
scattered to the winds." Perhaps this little incident, more than all 
others, contributed to rouse that phrenzy and despair, which induced
her rashly to terminate, by her own hand, her own existence.15
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Notice that even as Otis invoked the epistemological authority of novels and
adopted their narrative strategies, his reconstruction tended to confirm the
contemporary critique of fiction as corrupting immature minds and stimulating
unhealthy passions. Like many authors of early sentimental tales and novels,
Otis shrewdly hedged his bets by implicitly condemning fictive modes even as
he employed them.
     On the other side, Sullivan, the prosecutor, presented a competing
image of the relationship between Fairbanks and Fales and of the tragedy in the
grove, one almost as melodramatic as his opponent's. According to Sullivan's
account, Fairbanks was a lazy, pampered, and lustful degenerate, while Fales
was a virtuous young woman. Sullivan implied that Fairbanks first tried to
hoodwink or seduce Fales by presenting her with the forged marriage certifi-
cate; when she refused his advances, he may have then tried to rape her; he
then finally killed her when he proved unable to consummate his sexual assault.
This is the dramatic scene that Sullivan sketched for the jury; note, at the
outset, the laviryer's explicit appeal to the imaginations of the jurors:
I now again call your imaginations to an image from whence the eye
turns with horror, and of which language refuses a description.
     When he [Fairbanks] had produced the false certificate, and she
had with a virtuous indignation torn the imposition in pieces, he be-
came enraged: - Perhaps the knife was first exhibited to obtain by
terror, what he feared he could not obtain by force. She turned on her
face, the stab on her back altered her position; her shoes and shawl 
were thrown off in the struggle. When her arms defended her throat
the wounds were given in her bosom to remove the obstruction, 
and her arms and hands mangled to gain access to the neck. Thus far
led on, he found no retreat; but gave the ghastly wound, which more 
immediately produced her death. - But I quit the horrid and distressing
scene.16
     Significantly, Sullivan did not reject Otis's invocation of fiction as an
epistemological authority but resorted to it as well in order to strengthen his
case. To his opponent's observation that novelists often described frustrated
love as leading to female suicide, Sullivan replied that even fictional authors
confirmed that when women decided to kill themselves, they did so by drown-
ing or poisoning or strangling, rather than by stabbing.17 Surely it is signifi-
cant that both lawyers, at a trial in which a man's life was at stake, chose to
employ fiction as their standard of what was possible or probable in real life.
Whatever their own views, the lawyers must have assumed that the jurors in
the case - who they were, of course, trying to influence - were already predis-
posed to view the real world through the lens of sentimental culture.

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     If the jury had any doubts as to which imaginative reconstruction of the
crime to believe, they were probably resolved by the closing charge of the
judges, which was extremely hostile to Fairbanks. The obedient jurors came
in with a verdict of guilty, and Jason was publicly hanged on Dedham's town
common before an enormous crowd of spectators, estimated at 10,000.18 But
the public's fascination with the Fairbanks case did not die with Jason. Rather,
publishers continued to produce a series of broadsides and pamphlets on the
controversial case, some hostile toward Fairbanks, others sympathetic.19 One
of the more interesting of those publications was entitled The SOLEMN DEC-
LARATI0N of tbe Late Unfortunate Jason Fairbanks. It featured both an
autobiographical statement by Jason himself, supposedly made in prison while
awaiting execution, and a longer sentimental and very sympathetic biography
of Fairbanks, probably written by Sarah Wentworth Morton, a well-known
Boston socialite and sentimental poet.20
     According to his own statement, Jason had been acquainted with Betsey
Fales from "a very early age" and had eventually become her "favored lover."
Although he was initially treated by her family with "respect and affection,"
Betsey's sister and mother turned against Fairbanks, forcing the young lovers
to separate. When a chance meeting led to a renewal of the courtship a year
later, the couple arranged a series of rendezvous in the grove of birches, in one
of her father's outbuildings, and at the homes of neighbors. As Jason's health
deteriorated, Betsey began visiting him at his father's house, commonly staying
until one in the morning and once even remaining the entire night. On at least
one of those occasions the couple had sexual intercourse. Then in May 1801,
with Jason's health much improved, the couple arranged a meeting in the
thicket of birches in order to discuss their situation.21
     Here Jason provided yet another account of the fatal meeting in the
grove, one similar to the version offered by Harrison Gray Otis at the trial, but
differing from it in a few crucial details. According to Jason, the couple was
engaged in a "long conversation upon the subject of marriage," when he recalled
the fictitious marriage certificate prepared for him by his niece the previous
day. He showed Betsey the spurious document, commented that it was as close
to marriage as they would ever get, and tore the certificate to pieces. While
assuring Fales of his willingness to marry her instantly, Fairbanks acknowledged
that she would even then have to continue living at her father's house, since he,
Jason, had "no means, nor any place of ... [his] own to carry her to." Betsey
thereupon began to "weep bitterly," saying that such an arrangement would be
impossible since her mother would immediately "turn her out" of the house.
She then questioned Jason's sincerity, noting that her sisters had told her that
Fairbanks did not really love her. Jason's statement then reached a crucial
juncture, recounting an exchange that had not been included in his lawyer's
version of events:

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     And now with all sorrow, and blame to myself, do I pursue the
remainder of this melancholy history; for I replied angrily and roughly,
that if she were capable, and willing to believe all that her sisters . . .
said upon the subject, she might go to the devil with them, since she 
so well knew that I had already possessed her person, and received 
the pledge of her most tender attachment!
     She then, with great quickness, demanded of me - "if I had ever
told any one of our connection?' I rashly, but sincerely, answered, 
that I had indeed entrusted our secret to my intimate friends, Reuben 
Farrington and Isaac Whiting. - Upon which she violently 
exclaimed, Oh! you are a monster!" - and looking on me, as I sat 
whittling a smallpiece of wood with a pen-knife, she cried out, 
"give me that knife, I will put an end to my existence,  you 
false-bearted man! - for I had rather die than live!"
     At the same time, stretching out her hand, she took the knife,
and began, as if in a state of distraction, to stab her breast and body -
screaming out, and walking violently from me - . . ; while I, struck
with astonishment, remained without power, and in a cold state of
insensibility; but was too - too soon awakened from this dreadful
stupefaction, by her coming, and either falling or sitting down by me.
- Her throat was cut - which seeing, I immediately seized that cruel
knife which had robbed me of all my fond heart held dear! and while
it yet remained wet with her blood, stabbed myself in many and 
repeated places; only leaving off when I had finished cutting my 
own throat,and when I believed all was over with me!22
     After Jason's own dramatic statement, the pamphlet continued with a
sympathetic biography that portrayed Fairbanks as a gifted, industrious, and
sensitive young man. As for Betsey Fales, she was described as a sentimental
and impressionable young woman who spent much of her spare time reading
works of fiction and moral amusement, in which the passion of love was
generally transcendant." According to the account, her reading of sentimental
fiction helped shape and arouse her love for Fairbanks and, by implication, may
have finally led her to take her own life.23
     What really happened in the grove of birches on May 18, 1801? Did
Betsey Fales cut her own throat in romantic despair over Jason's inability to
marry and support her, as suggested by the defense lawyer, Harrison Gray
Otis? Did Jason Fairbanks stab Fales to death while trying unsuccessfully to
rape her, as postulated by the prosecutor, James Sullivan? Or did Betsey slay
herself in a fit of rage over Jason's indiscretion in revealing their sexual relation-
ship to his male friends, as Fairbanks himself claimed in his last statement in
prison? We will almost certainly never know for sure, but for the purposes of

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this essay it really does not matter. What does matter is the way that sentimen-
tal fiction pervaded the tragedy of Jason Fairbanks and Betsey Fales from
beginning to end. To better understand the significance of that pattern, it may
be helpful to set fictive aspects of the Fairbanks case into historiographic
perspective.
     The classic account of fiction's stunning rise to literary predominance
during the last decades of the eighteenth century was formulated by the Ameri-
can jurist and author, Royall Tyler, in The Algerine Captive, first published at
Walpole, New Hampshire, in 1797. The picaresque hero of the novel, Updike
Underhill, was imprisoned abroad during a seven-year period stretching from
1788 through 1795. In the preface to his tale, Tyler described the transforma-
tion in literary culture that had occurred in New England during his protag-
onist's absence. When Underhill left his home region in 1788, several modern
types of literature, including "books of Biography, Travels, Novels, and modern
Romances," were still confined to the inhabitants of coastal towns or to minis-
ters, doctors, and lawyers in rural districts. On the other hand, Tyler ex-
plained, the typical "farmer's library" was largely restricted to religious and
didactic publications. But by the time of the captive's return in 1795, that
traditional regime had been demolished by an influx of new literary forms and
the establishment of circulating libraries in inland towns. "No sooner was a
taste for amusing literature diffused," Tyler explained, "than all orders of
country life with one accord forsook the sober sermons and Practical Pieties of
their fathers for the gay stories and splendid impieties of the Traveller and the
Novelist.24 Although not the view of a disinterested observer, Tyler's assess-
ment was still being echoed and endorsed by literary historians 150 years
later.25
     However, two recent studies of book production and diffusion in rural
Massachusetts have challenged the notion that fiction rapidly conquered the
New England countryside. In a perceptive survey of the printing and booksell-
ing business of the Merriam family of Brookfield, Jack Larkin notes the rela-
tive scarcity of fiction in the output and sales of that firm. "Fiction could be
found on the country bookstore's shelves, but up to the early 1830s it seems to
have played no transforming role in the cultural lives of ordinary rural people,"
Larkin generalizes. "Fiction moved slowly, in minuscule numbers, against the
predominantly orthodox cultural grain of central Massachusetts, where
Puritan-bred suspicions of novels remained powerful.26  That view has been
reinforced by the skillful reconstruction of two early social libraries in Concord
by Robert A. Gross, who finds that fewer than seven percent of the volumes
in a collection assembled between 1795 and 1820 were works of fiction. After
explicitly challenging one of Tyler's extravagant claims, Gross notes that "only
a handful of novels, and all of those highly moral, made it onto the shelves.27

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     Although Larkin and Gross make a strong case against the Tyler thesis,
many of the circumstances surrounding the Dedham tragedy of 1801 tend to
support the idea that a revolution in literary culture had already been accom-
plished in eastern Massachusetts by the beginning of the nineteenth century.
Trial testimony indicated that Betsey Fales had shared at least one melodramatic
novel with her neighbors during the spring of 1801.28 Supporters of Jason
Fairbanks argued that romantic fiction played a crucial role in shaping Betsey's
love for Jason and in precipitating her violent demise.29 Herman Mann's
initial newspaper report of the tragedy was interspersed with evocative phrases
drawn from sentimental discourse, which suggests that he expected local readers
to be attuned to the language of literary sensibility.30 Various other published
treatments of the affair were also infused with sentimental motifs.31 Lawyers
on both sides of the case not only adopted narrative strategies suggestive of
fiction in their reconstructions of events but also invoked the epistemological
authority of imaginative literature in their arguments.32 In short, fictive
themes pervaded cultural responses to two of the most serious events that could
ever confront a community: a murder (or suicide) and a capital trial. The
readers of Dedham and vicinity had not simply found a new literary diversion;
sentimental fiction offered them a new language, a new sensibility, and a new
way of perceiving the world around them.
     There are several ways to reconcile the striking cultural pattern exposed
by the Fairbanks case with the findings of Larkin and Gross. First, sentimental
values and motifs could be widely diffused through the culture by vehicles
other than fiction. As suggested by the Fairbanks case, even readers who
scrupulously avoided novels might still be exposed to the new discourse in
newspapers, trial reports, and other publications.33 Second, there may have
been a significant time lag in the diffusion of the "fiction revolution" across the
state of Massachusetts. Sentimental novels may have reached Dedham, a com-
munity within the cultural orbit of Boston long before they arrived in substan-
tial numbers at inland Brookfield. Third, the relatively genteel social libraries
of Concord were probably not representative of popular reading habits
throughout eastern Massachusetts. As Jesse H. Shera has demonstrated, the
commercial circulating libraries that flourished in the region during the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries actually specialized in novels and
other works of fiction.34 Fourth, Larkin and Gross provide evidence suggest-
ing that some young people in both Brookfield and Concord ignored literary
proscriptions and embraced novel reading despite the disapproval of their elders.
According to Larkin, purchases by apprentices in the Merriam printing
office accounted for more than half of the firm's total sales of fiction.35 It is
only reasonable to assume that the literary tastes of those young men were
shared (along with the actual novels) by at least some of their local friends.

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Similarly, Gross reports that one Mary Wilder Van Schalkwyck, a well-connec-
ed young widow in her early twenties, read fiction with enthusiasm in Con-
cord during the 1790s and early 1800s. Van Schalkwyck not only owned novels
herself but also lent them to and borrowed them from her friends and regaled
her companions with vivid renditions of fictional plots.36 In short, the reading
habits of young working men in Brookfield and young women of leisure in
Concord, along with the reported literary interests of the social circle of Fair-
banks and Fales in Dedham, all suggest that locally flourishing "youth cultures"
in early national Massachusetts were committed to the consumption of novels,
whether their elders approved or not.37
     But there was more to the fiction revolution than that. Herman Mann
highlighted sentimental motifs in his newspaper account (presumably directed
for the most part at adult male readers) and lawyers on both sides of the Fair-
banks case incorporated fictional themes into their arguments (certainly directed
at adult male judges and jurors), suggesting that young people were not the only
ones being seduced by the new literary forms. Editors and lawyers not only
used sentimental language themselves but seemed to assume that their mature
neighbors were attuned to fictive discourse as well. As they struggled to retain
power and influence in an increasingly egalitarian public culture, young Federal-
ists like Harrison Gray Otis were at least as willing to employ fashionable
literary motifs as they were to embrace innovative political tactics.38 Literary
sentimentalism was not merely a resource for the socially powerless - as
emphasized by scholars like Cathy Davidson - but was becoming an effective
tool of established elites.39 In fact, some of those elites may have themselves
been seduced by the new ethos. Chief Justice Dana of the Massachusetts
Supreme Court reportedly sobbed while imposing the death penalty on Jason
Fairbanks.40 And John Lowell, Jr., Otis's high-strung co-counsel, was suppos-
edly so distraught by the outcome of the Fairbanks case that he suffered a
nervus breakdown and never again resumed the practice of law. Surely those
are signs of true sensibility.41
      Whether manipulative cynics or sincere proselytes, the authors of
sentimentalized crime coverage and commentary were active agents of cultural
change, carrying new values to those outside the still limited circle of commit-
ed fiction readers. The presence of sentimental themes in courtroom proceed-
ings was particularly significant. As Lawrence M. Friedman has observed,
arguments presented in trials are often important clues to what stories count 
as good, or true, or compelling stories, within a particular culture."42 Indeed,
the arguments of Otis and Sullivan suggest that sentimentalism had successfully
filtrated the "spontaneous philosophy" of early nineteenth-century popular
culture.43 While old-fashioned moralists, who feared and despised novels, may
have taken grim satisfaction in the tragic ending to the Fairbanks story, they
could only have been alarmed by the many fictive versions of the tale that were

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told and retold by the cultural arbiters of Dedham.44 Their trepidation was
entirely justified: By integrating the motifs of imaginative literature into the
authoritative discourses of law and journalism, published responses to the deaths
of Betsey Fales and Jason Fairbanks legitimized, even as they critiqued, the
birth of a sentimental culture.

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ENDNOTES

* A somewhat shorter version of this essay was delivered at the Annual Meeting of the Ameri-
can Historical Association held at Washington, D.C., December 27-30, 1992. Both versions are
largely abstracted from my book, Pillars of Salt,  Monuments of Grace. New England Crime
Literature and the Origins of American Popular Culture, 1674-1860 (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1993). I am grateful to Oxford University Press for permission to reprint material here
that has already appeared in that publication. I would also like to thank Morris L. Cohen,
Patricia Cline Cohen, David R. Papke, and Amy Gilman Srebnick for their comments, criticism,
and encouragement. 

1. See Cathy N. Davidson, Revolution and the Word. The Rise of the Novel in America (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1986), p. 38-150; Herbert Ross Brown, The Sentimental Novel in
America, 1789-1860 (New York: Pageant Books, 1959); James D. Hart, The Popular Book: A
History of America's Literary Taste (New York: Oxford University Press, 1950), pp. 51-57;
Alexander Cowie, The Rise of the American Novel (New York:  American Book, 1948), pp. 9-28;
Frank Luther Mott, Golden Multitudes. The Story of Best Sellers in the United States (New York:
Macmillan, 1947), pp. 35-40.

2. See Cohen, Pillars of Salt, Monuments of Grace, pp. 14-15, 26-31, and 167-246, passim; Cohen,
"Pillars of Salt: The Transformation of New England Crime Literature, 1674-1860" (Ph.D. diss.,
Brandeis University, 1989), pp. 19-20, 31-37, 319-529, passim. For two other scholars who have
discussed trial reports, see David S. Reynolds, Beneath the American Renaissance. The Subversive
Imagination in the Age of Emerson and Melville (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1988), pp. 171-18 1;
David Ray Papke, Framing the Criminal: Crime, Cultural Work, and the Loss of Critical Per-
spective, 1830-1900 (Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1987), pp. 19-32. On the rise of the "penny
press," see Papke, Framing the Criminal, pp. 33-74; Dan Schiller, Objectivity and the News:  The
Public and the Rise of Commercial Journalism (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,
1981), pp. 12-75; Michael Schudson, Discovering The New: A Social History of American Newspa-
pers  (New York: Basic Books, 1978), pp 12-60; Frank Luther Mott, American Journalism: A
History of  Newspapers in the United States Through 260 Years: 1690 to 1950, rev. ed. (New York:
Macmillan, 1950), pp. 215-52; Willard Grosvenor Bleyer, Main Currents in the History of American
Journalism (Boston: Houghton Mifflinv 1927), pp. 47-51; Frederic Hudson, Journalism in the
United States, From 1690 to 1872 (New York- Harper & Brothers, 1873), pp. 155-84.

3. For other modern accounts of the Fairbanks/Fales case, see Robert Brand Hanson,  Dedham,
Massachusetts 1635-1890 (Dedham: Dedham Historical Societyv 1976), pp. 176-89; Edward Rowe
Snow, Piracy, Mutiny and Murder (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1959), pp. 80-94; Ferris Greenslet,
The Lowells and Their Seven Worlds (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1946), pp. 95-111; Charles
Warren, Jacobin and Junto or Early American Politics as Viewed in the Diary of Dr Nathaniel Ames
1758-1822 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1931), pp- 127-45. In regard to my own
treatment of the case, I would like to thank Robert B. Hanson of the Dedham Historical Society
for kindly sharing his wealth of knowledge on the subject.

4. See Cohen, Pillars of Salt, Monuments of Grace, pp. 167-94.

5. Columbian Minerva (cited hereafter as Minerva], May 19, 1801, p. 3.

6. Ibid.

7. Report of the Trial of Jason Fairbanks, on an Indictment for the Murder of Miss Elizabeth Fales,
4th ed. (Boston: Russell and Cutler, 1801) [cited hereafter as Fairbanks Report], p. [5). For
biographical information on Sullivan, see DAB, vol. 18, pp. 190-91; Thomas C. Amory, Life of
James Sullivan: With Selections from his Writings, 2 vols. (Boston: Phillips, Sampson, 1859); on
Otis, see Samuel Eliot Morison, Harrison Gray Otis, 1765-1848. The Urbane Federalist (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1969); DAB, vol. 14, 98-100; on Lowell, see Greenslet, Lowells, pp. 88-111 and
passim; DAB, vol. 11, pp. 465-66. On the Young Federalists, see David Hackett Fischer, The
Revolution of American Conservatism: The Federalist Party in the Era of Jeffersonian Democracy
(New York. Harper & Row, 1965); on Otis and Lowell in particular, see Fischer, Revolution, pp.
38-41 and 268.

8. Fairbanks Report, pp. 15-36, passim.

9. Ibid., pp. 18 and 25.

10. Ibid., pp. 16-17 and 20-22; on the plot of Julia Mandeville, see Greenslet, Lowells, pp. 101-2.

11. See Fairbanks Report, pp. 12-18.

12. See ibid., pp. 15, 19, 21, 25-27, 30-31, and 33-36.

13. See ibid., pp. 43-47. Although Otis is not identified by name as having given the closing
argument for the defense recorded in the published report, both Greenslet and Morison agree that
it was delivered by Otis rather than Lowell; see Greenslet, Lowells, p. 105; Morison, Harrison
Gray Otis, pp. 54 and 528.

14. Fairbanks Report, pp. 47-48.

15. Ibid., p. 56.

16. See Fairbanks Report, pp. 7-8 and 65-80, quoted at 73-74.

17. Ibid., p. 66.

18. See Fairbanks Report, pp. 81-83 and 85; on the execution, also see Indendent Chronicle,
Sept. 10, 1801, p. 3; Sept. 14, 1801, p. 2; Mercury and New-England Palladium, Sept. 11, 1801, p.
2; Columbian Centinel, Sept. 12, 1801, p. 2; Boston Gazette, Sept. 14, 1801, p. 2; Minerva, Sept.
15, 1801, p. 3; Warren, Jacobin and Junto, p. 134; Hanson, Dedham, pp. 186-87.

19. See Cohen, Pillars of Salt, pp. 178-92, pp. 408-29.

20. For a more complete discussion of this pamphlet and its probable authorship, see Cohen,
"Pillars of Salt", pp. 184-90,  pp. 420-29. Jason was almost certainly
"assisted" in drafting his own statement, very likely by Sarah Wentworth Morton.

21. Ebenezer Fairbanks, Jr., comp., The Solemn Declaration of the Late Unfortunate Jason
Fairbanks, 2nd Edition (Dedham: H. Mann, 1801), pp. 3-6.

22. Ibid., pp. 6-8.

23. See ibid., pp. 10-37, quoted at 19.

24. Royall Tyler, The Algerine Captive, excerpted in Robert E. Spiller, ed., The American Literary
Revolution 1783-1837, pp. [21-23]; also quoted in Brown, Sentimental Novel, pp. 15-16. For the
timing of Underhill's absence and captivity, see Royall Tyler, The Algerine Captive, 2 vols.
(Walpole, N.H.: D Carlisle, Jr., 1797), vol. 1, pp. 186 and 205; vol. 2, p. 239.

25. See Hart, The Popular Book, pp. 3-21; Jesse H. Shera, Foundations of the Public Library. The
Origins of the Public Library Movement in New England 1629-1855 (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1949), pp. 119-121 and 148-153; Brown, Sentimental Novel, pp. 3-27; Lillie Deming
Loshe, The Early American Novel, 1789-1830 (1907; rpt. New York: Frederick Ungar, 1958), pp.
2-3; 1 am grateful to David D. Hall for pointing out to me that Tyler was not a disinterested
observer. For some recent findings that also tend to support Tyler's account, see William J.
Gilmore, Reading Becomes a Necessity of Life. Material and Cultural Life in Rural New England,
1780-1835 (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1989), pp. 26, 172, 208, and 220.

26. See Jack Larkin, "The Merriams of Brookfield: Printing in the Economy and Culture of
Rural Massachusetts in the Early Nineteenth Century," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian
Society 96 (April 1986): 39-73, quoted at 68.

27. See Robert A. Gross, "Much Instruction from Little Reading: Books and Libraries in
Thoreau's Concord," Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society 97 (April 1987): 129-88,
quoted at 152.

28. See discussion in text above and Fairbanks Report, pp. 16-17 and 20; on the plot of the novel,
see Greenslet, Lowells, pp. 101-102.

29. See discussion in text above and Fairbanks Report, pp. 43 and 47-48; Fairbanks, Solemn
Declaration, p. 19.

30. See discussion in text above and Minerva, May 19, 1801, p. 3.

31. In addition to Solemn Declaration, discussed above, see other works discussed in Cohen,
Pillars of Salt, Monuments of Grace, chapter 8.

32. See discussion in text above and Fairbanks Report, pp. 47-48, 56, 66, and 71-74.

33. Along similar lines, Kenneth Silverman has described the earlier infiltration of sentimen-
talism into revolutionary political discourse; see Silverman, A Cultural History of the American
Revolution (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1976), pp. 82-87.

34. See Shera, Foundations, pp. 127-55.

35. See Larkin, "Merriams of  Brookfield," pp. 68-69. Larkin notes that "one of the novel-buying
apprentices later lamented his fiction reading, believing that it had permanently injured his
powers of factual retention and concentration."

36. See Gross, "Much Instruction," pp. 148-49.

37. On the similar appeal of novels to the youth of the Upper Connecticut River Valley of
northern New England, see Gilmore, Reading Becomes a Necessity, p. 220.

38. On the adoption of new political tactics by young Federalists like Harrison Gray Otis, see
David H. Fischer, The Revolution of American Conservatism: The Federalist Party in the Era of
Jeffersonian Democracy (New York: Harper & Row, 1965).

39. See Davidson, Revolution and the Word, pp. 38-54.

40. See Warren, Jacobin and Junto, p. 128.

41. See Greenslet, Lowells, p. 111.

42. Lawrence M. Friedman, "Law, Lawyers, and Popular Culture,"  98 Yale Law Journal 1595
(1989)

43. On Gramsci's concept of "spontaneous philosophy," see T. J. Jackson Lears, "The Concept
Of Cultural Hegemony: Problems and Possibilities," American Historical Review 90 June 1985):
570.

44. For evidence of some such alarm on the part of a social conservative of Dedham, see Cohen,
Pillars of Salt, Monuments of Grace, p. 191.