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Date:
September 9, 2024
Time:
9:06 pm
Event Category:

Karen Cox with GOAT CASTLE Tuesday, November 14, 2017 – 5:00pm

In 1932, the city of Natchez, Mississippi, reckoned with an unexpected influx of journalists and tourists as the lurid story of a local murder was splashed across headlines nationwide. Two eccentrics, Richard Dana and Octavia Dockery—known in the press as the “Wild Man” and the “Goat Woman”—enlisted an African American man named George Pearls to rob their reclusive neighbor, Jennie Merrill, at her estate. During the attempted robbery, Merrill was shot and killed. The crime drew national coverage when it came to light that Dana and Dockery, the alleged murderers, shared their huge, decaying antebellum

mansion with their goats and other livestock, which prompted journalists to call the estate “Goat Castle.” Pearls was killed by an Arkansas policeman in an unrelated incident before he could face trial. However, as was all too typical in the Jim Crow South, the white community demanded “justice,” and an innocent black woman named Emily Burns was ultimately sent to prison for the murder of Merrill. Dana and Dockery not only

avoided punishment but also lived to profit from the notoriety of the murder.

In telling this strange, fascinating story, Karen Cox highlights the larger ideas that made the tale so irresistible to the popular press and provides a unique lens through which to view the transformation of the plantation South into the fallen, gothic South.

About the Author
Karen L. Cox is professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

Goat Castle: A True Story of Murder, Race, and the Gothic

South (Hardcover)
By Karen L. Cox
$26.00
ISBN: 9781469635033
Availability: Coming Soon – Available for Pre-Order Now Published: University of North Carolina Press – October 9th, 2017

Publicity: Catherine Cheney

Catherine.cheney@uncpress.org

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