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A Juror’s Testimony

by Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.


I know there are some of my readers who will remember very well the leading circumstances of the story I am about to tell.— I allude to the trial of Ezra Larrabee for theft. But I doubt if there are many who understand the influence that was brought to bear upon the jury in making up of their verdict. The chief actor in the scene has passed away, honored and respected by all who were admitted to his friendship; and I deem it no impropriety now to make public those circumstances which, to most people, have thus far been only a matter of gossip and speculation.

At the September Term of our Supreme Judicial Court, in the year 1849, I chanced to be a member of the first petit jury, and on the third day of the session, after we had disposed of two or three cases of ordinary importance, we were called to sit upon the case of the Commonwealth against Ezra Larrabee. And this was by far the most exciting case that had been presented for trial for a long time. The circumstances, as understood by the public, were as follows:

Ezra Larrabee was one of the most respectable and honored men of our town. He was about five-and-forty years of age; a stout, fair-faced, warm-hearted, impulsive man; and was by occupation a draughtsman. He had a wife and three children; and if he had a real fault that society could put its finger upon, it was that he did not exhibit a proper energy in providing for his family. He had once been very dissipated—so much so that he was at one time fairly in the gutter; and what made his dissipation worse, he had contracted a fondness for gambling. He did not seem to gamble for the purpose of gain, but simply from the impulse of a blind passion induced by drink.

At lengthy the great Washingtonian wave swept our way, and among the first of the redeemed ones was Ezra… Read More