00:00Mother thinks police are doing their best. Atlanta, Georgian Tuesday, May 13, 1913.
00:05Mrs. J. W. Coleman, mother of little 14-year-old Mary Fagan, prostrated with grief for 16 days
00:12following the tragic slaying of her child, took up her household duties Tuesday for the first time,
00:17resigned to the calamity that has befallen her home, and relying on the law to avenge the death
00:22of her child. It was such a beautiful morning, said Mrs. Coleman to a Georgian reporter,
00:27and I have been able to rest now for three nights, so I felt like doing my work again.
00:32My house has been in such a turmoil since this dreadful tragedy. I feel I am helpless and have
00:37resigned myself to the sad lot that has befallen us. All we can do is wait, and waiting is a
00:43hard
00:43task. No complaint of police. Don't misunderstand me. I am complaining about what the officers are
00:48doing. It is far better to go slow and be sure that we are doing right than to hurry and
00:53make a mistake.
00:54I believe that the police and the solicitor are doing everything they can to find the guilty man.
00:59They ought to do it. Such a crime ought to be punished, but I do not want them to make
01:04a mistake.
01:04I heard that feeling was very strong last week, but I am glad that no hasty action was taken.
01:09It might have been all wrong, and I think I would have been grieved as much as anybody.
01:14We have made many inquiries among our friends and acquaintances, and have not found one who saw
01:18Mary after twelve o'clock Saturday when she went to the factory to get her pay. So much seems to
01:23depend on that point, and if anyone did see her, he certainly ought to tell about it. It does look
01:28like if Mary were on the street Saturday afternoon as many friends as we have, some of them would have
01:33seen her. We do not believe she ever left the factory.
01:37Mary has read no reports. Mrs. Coleman, since her nervous collapse, has not been allowed to read
01:42the newspapers, her husband realizing the seriousness of her condition. Since last Wednesday, she has had
01:47absolute quiet, and Tuesday she resumed her duties with the home as she expressed it, to make home like
01:53it used to be, if possible. She declared that only the strength and vigor that has always been hers
01:59enabled her to withstand the blow that had befallen her.
02:02Mary and I were very much alike, she said, strong and healthy. Mary would have been fourteen years
02:08old on June 1st, but she was very large and robust for her age. She often passed for sixteen. Her
02:13birthday is nearly here, but it will be so different this year.
Comments