Thursday 20 May 2021

AUTHOR FAVOURITES: TOM DOOLEY by BILL BROOKS

 

Bill Brooks is the author of many highly-acclaimed historical and western novels. Booklist compared his work with classics like ‘The Virginian,’ ‘Shane’ and ‘Hombre’.

Bill tells me a favourite of his own novels is TOM DOOLEY, published by Five Star Publishing.

 



According to Wikipedia, TOM DOOLEY’s real name was THOMAS C. DULA. He was born to a poor Appalachian hill-country family in Wilkes County, North Carolina in 1845. At school he "probably played with the female FOSTERS" – ANNE and her cousins LAURA and PAULINE.


TOM DOOLEY

Dula and Anne Foster may have been intimate as teenagers, but in 1859 Anne married a local farmer and cobbler, becoming Anne Melton.

In 1862, Tom enlisted in the Confederate Army as a private in Company K, 42nd North Carolina Infantry Regiment.

On one surviving army muster roll he is listed as a "musician" and a "drummer." Dula played the fiddle (although not, as was reported, the banjo.) Dula was wounded several times in battle. He was captured and sent to a northern prison camp. He was released at the end of the war in April 1865 and returned home.

Dula – supposedly a "ladies man” and “libertine” - continued his relationship with the married Anne.

 


ANNE FOSTER/MELTON

It was not long before he began an intimate relationship with Laura Foster too. Folklore has it that Laura became pregnant, and she and Dula decided to elope. On the morning she was to meet Dula, May 25, 1866, Laura quietly left her home and rode off on her father's horse. She was never seen alive again.

Suspicion that Dula had murdered Laura caused him to flee the area. Then a grave was found containing Laura’s body, her legs drawn up to fit in the shallow grave. She had been stabbed once in the chest.



No one really knows what happened to Laura, but some stories implicate Anne. It’s claimed that Anne murdered Laura out of jealousy because she was marrying Dula; that Dula suspected Anne was the murderer, but he still loved Anne enough to take the blame himself. Pauline Foster testified that Anne showed her Laura’s grave one night.

A posse went after Dula. He was arrested and tried for Laura’s murder, convicted, given a new trial on appeal and convicted again. Facing execution, Dula wrote a 15-page account of his life, as well as a note that exonerated Anne. His literacy is highly unusual, considering the harsh poverty of his upbringing.

As he stood on the gallows, Dula reportedly said, "Gentlemen, I did not harm a single hair on that fair lady's head.” He was executed on May 1, 1868, nearly two years after Laura's murder.



How did an obscure incident in backwoods Appalachia, which in reality may have contained some quite sordid elements, turn into a folk legend? Well, the trial received national publicity from newspapers such as ‘The New York Times,’ dwelling on the eternal-triangle aspect and the mysteries inherent in the story.  And then a local poet, THOMAS LAND, is believed to have written a song about the tragedy titled ‘Tom Dooley’ (which was how Dula's name was pronounced) shortly after Dula was hanged. This cemented Dula's place in North Carolina legend.


Wilkes County, North Carolina


This aptly-named ‘murder ballad’ gives a prominent role in the tragedy to a man named Grayson. In reality, COLONEL JAMES GRAYSON, of Trade, Tennessee was someone Dula worked for about a week. Later Grayson helped the posse that caught Dula, but that was his only part in the affair.

Another tale says that Anne confessed to the murder on her deathbed, having killed Laura in a fit of jealousy, afterwards begging Tom to help her conceal the body.

In 2001, the citizens of North Wilkesboro presented a petition to the North Carolina Governor, asking that Dula be posthumously pardoned. No action was taken.

A revival of Land’s murder ballad became a Number One hit single for THE KINGSTON TRIO in 1958.


Here they are performing it live: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3zdE8bliGI

This spawned a film. MICHAEL LANDON, midway between ‘I was A Teenage Werewolf’ and Bonanza,’ portrayed Dula in ‘The Legend of Tom Dooley’ (1959.) The movie is a fictional treatment inspired by the lyrics of Land's folk song.


REVIEWERS on TOM DOOLEY by Bill Brooks:

‘Brooks has a unique talent that extends far beyond the formulas of the western genre. He’s an extraordinary historical novelist.’

‘He captures the everyday humanity behind the legends while simultaneously adding to the myth of the great golden West.’

Find TOM DOOLEY here: https://www.amazon.com/Tom-Dooley-American-Bill-Brooks/dp/1432832271

And here: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Tom-Dooley-American-Bill-Brooks/dp/1432832271/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=tom+dooley+bill+brooks&qid=1621343275&sr=8-1


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