Badger State Banner: Anna Morris/Frank Blunt and Gertrude Field, January 18, 1894

Field "fell upon the neck of the prisoner and wept for half an hour"

by Jonathan Ned Katz. Copyright (c) by Jonathan Ned Katz. All rights reserved.

The Badger State Banner, published in Black River Falls, Wisconsin, carried the following news on January 18, 1894:

ANNA MORRIS GIVEN ONE YEAR

Anna Morris, alias Frank Blunt, the woman who has tried to be a man for the last fifteen years, was sentenced to the penitentiary for one year by Judge Gilson at Fond du Lac. She was arrested several months ago in Milwaukee charged with stealing $175 in Fond du Lac. It was then discovered that the prisoner was a woman, although she had worn masculine attire nearly all her life. A jury convicted her of larceny and a motion for a new trial was overruled. After the sentence had been passed Gertrude Field, a woman who claimed to have married the prisoner in Eau Claire, fell upon the neck of the prisoner and wept for half an hour. This woman has furnished all the money for Blunt's defense, and now proposes to carry the case to the Supreme Court.(1)

References

  1. Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay American History: Lesbians and Gay Men in the U.S.A. (NY: Crowell, 1976), page ?, citing: "Anna Morris Given One Year," Badger State Banner (Black River Falls, Wis.), Jan. 18, IB94, p. 3, col. 6. Jonathan Ned Katz wishes to thank the State Historical Society of Wisconsin for a copy of this document. This document is quoted in part by Michael Lesy in Wisconsin Death Trip (N.Y.: Pantheon, 1973), no pagination.