Tag Archives: President James Garfield

No One Safe

Dr. John P. Gray

Dr. John P. Gray

Patients could bear animosity toward asylum staff (see last post), but no one in the public eye was immune from random attack–including Dr. John P. Gray, superintendent of the State Lunatic Asylum in Utica, New York. He had been an expert witness regarding the sanity of Charles J. Guiteau when he stood trial for the assassination of President James Garfield. “I see nothing but a life of moral degradation, moral obliquity, profound selfishness, and disregard for the rights of others,” Gray said [of Guiteau] at trial. “I see no evidence of insanity but simply a life swayed by his own passions.”

The notoriety from this trial likely focused former shoemaker Henry Remshaw’s attention on Gray. Remshaw apparently had made public threats against Gray well before he entered Gray’s office one March evening in 1882 and shot him with a revolver. Fortunately Gray had looked up just at the right moment, and the bullet went through both cheeks rather than his brain. The journal Transactions of the Medical Society of the State of New York reported, “The hemorrhage was at first quite profuse, but in a short time began to subside, and ceased entirely in about four hours. Swelling and infiltration were immediate and extensive, and within a very few minutes of the reception of the wound it was almost impossible to separate the left eyelids, and before midnight the right eye was closed and the face distorted beyond recognition. There was no shock, the pulse ranged between 80 and 90, and the Doctor exhibited perfect self- possession.”

Charles Julius Guiteau

Charles Julius Guiteau

The Transactions of the Medical Society also reported that Remshaw escaped to his brother’s-in-law in the nearby town of Deerfield, “where he called for two glasses of ale and said he was going to New York.” Remshaw later went to the jail and gave himself up. “When searched there was found upon his person four revolvers, a single-barrelled derringer, a dirk knife, and over two hundred cartridges.” Remshaw was sent to the State Asylum for Insane Criminals.

Physicians at the time did not think Gray’s wound particularly serious, but the superintendent never recovered his health entirely. The wound affected his breathing and left him with almost constant pain. Gray died officially of Bright’s disease (which causes inflammation of the kidneys) on November 29, 1886 at the age of 62.

Psychiatric Hospital, courtesy New York State Archives

Male Patients Exercising in the Yard of the Utica Psychiatric Hospital, courtesy New York State Archives

Asylum Superintendent’s Job Included Danger

American Journal of Insanity

American Journal of Insanity

Dr. John Gray (see last post) was an influential, well-known alienist, long-time editor of the American Journal of Insanity, and superintendent of the State Lunatic Asylum at Utica, NY. He was also the chief medical expert who had testified for the prosecution at the trial of Charles J. Guiteau, the assassin of President James Garfield in 1882. While sitting in his office one evening of that same year, Gray was shot through the upper jaw by Henry Remshaw in the presence of three other people (including his son, John Gray, Jr.).

Assassination of James Garfield, courtesy Smithsonian Magazine

Assassination of James Garfield, courtesy Smithsonian Magazine

Remshaw’s deed was thought to have been provoked by some aspect of the Guiteau’s trial, and he had apparently made several threats against Dr. Gray previous to the actual shooting. Remshaw ran outside the asylum to avoid capture, fired at his pursuers, and finally reached his home. There, he told a woman living on the lower floor that he had killed Gray, then “danced about, showed her four revolvers, a dirk, and piles of cartridges” and then told her he would give himself up.*

Inmates in Lockstep at Auburn Prison

Inmates in Lockstep at Auburn Prison

When Remshaw did give himself up at the Mohawk Street jail, he turned over his four loaded weapons and cartridges, plus a bottle of acetic acid and opium. Remshaw raved that he was an ambassador sent from heaven to kill Gray, but observers seemed to consider him a “crank and a fraud” more than someone who was insane. A court commission did find him insane, though, and recommended he be sent to an asylum. Remshaw was sent to the Insane Department of the State Prison at Auburn.

Gray died November 29, 1886 from causes attributed to his decline in health following the shooting.

 

*Quoted from an article from the Journal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology.