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Sacco and Vanzetti

Nicola Sacco (pronounced [niˈkɔːla ˈsakko]; April 22, 1891 – August 23, 1927) and Bartolomeo Vanzetti (pronounced [bartoloˈmɛːo vanˈtsetti, -ˈdzet-]; June 11, 1888 – August 23, 1927) were Italian immigrant anarchists who were controversially accused of murdering Alessandro Berardelli and Frederick Parmenter, a guard and a paymaster, during the April 15, 1920, armed robbery of the Slater and Morrill Shoe Company in Braintree, Massachusetts, United States. Seven years later, they were executed in the electric chair at Charlestown State Prison.

Anarchist trial defendants Bartolomeo Vanzetti (left) and Nicola Sacco (right)

After a few hours' deliberation on July 14, 1921, the jury convicted Sacco and Vanzetti of first-degree murder and they were sentenced to death by the trial judge. Anti-Italianism, anti-immigrant, and anti-anarchist bias were suspected as having heavily influenced the verdict. A series of appeals followed, funded largely by the private Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee. The appeals were based on recanted testimony, conflicting ballistics evidence, a prejudicial pretrial statement by the jury foreman, and a confession by an alleged participant in the robbery. All appeals were denied by trial judge Webster Thayer and also later denied by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. By 1926, the case had drawn worldwide attention. As details of the trial and the men's suspected innocence became known, Sacco and Vanzetti became the center of one of the largest causes célèbres in modern history. In 1927, protests on their behalf were held in every major city in North America and Europe, as well as in Tokyo, Sydney, Melbourne, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, Dubai, Montevideo, Johannesburg, and Auckland.[1]

Celebrated writers, artists, and academics pleaded for their pardon or for a new trial. Harvard law professor and future Supreme Court justice Felix Frankfurter argued for their innocence in a widely read Atlantic Monthly article that was later published in book form.[2] Even the Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini was convinced of their innocence and attempted to pressure American authorities to have them released.[3][4] The two were scheduled to die in April 1927, accelerating the outcry. Responding to a massive influx of telegrams urging their pardon, Massachusetts governor Alvan T. Fuller appointed a three-man commission to investigate the case. After weeks of secret deliberation that included interviews with the judge, lawyers, and several witnesses, the commission upheld the verdict. Sacco and Vanzetti were executed in the electric chair just after midnight on August 23, 1927.[5]

Investigations in the aftermath of the executions continued throughout the 1930s and '40s. The publication of the men's letters, containing eloquent professions of innocence, intensified belief in their wrongful execution. Additional ballistics tests and incriminating statements by the men's acquaintances have clouded the case. On August 23, 1977—the 50th anniversary of the executions—Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis issued a proclamation that Sacco and Vanzetti had been unfairly tried and convicted and that "any disgrace should be forever removed from their names".[6][7]

Background Edit

 
Sacco and Vanzetti

Sacco was a shoemaker and a night watchman,[8] born April 22, 1891, in Torremaggiore, Province of Foggia, Apulia region (in Italian: Puglia), Italy, who migrated to the United States at the age of seventeen.[9] Before immigrating, according to a letter he sent while imprisoned, Sacco worked on his father's vineyard, often sleeping out in the field at night to prevent animals from destroying the crops.[10] Vanzetti was a fishmonger born June 11, 1888, in Villafalletto, Province of Cuneo, Piedmont region. Both left Italy for the US in 1908,[11] although they did not meet until a 1917 strike.[12]

The men were believed to be followers of Luigi Galleani, an Italian anarchist who advocated revolutionary violence, including bombing and assassination. Galleani published Cronaca Sovversiva (Subversive Chronicle), a periodical that advocated violent revolution, and a bomb-making manual called La Salute è in voi! (Salvation Is within You!). At the time, Italian anarchists—in particular the Galleanist group—ranked at the top of the United States government's list of dangerous enemies.[13] Since 1914, the Galleanists had been identified as suspects in several violent bombings and assassination attempts, including an attempted mass poisoning.[14][15][16] Publication of Cronaca Sovversiva was suppressed in July 1918, and the government deported Galleani and eight of his closest associates on June 24, 1919.[17]

Other Galleanists remained active for three years, 60 of whom waged an intermittent campaign of violence against US politicians, judges, and other federal and local officials, especially those who had supported deportation of alien radicals. Among the dozen or more violent acts was the bombing of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer's home on June 2, 1919. In that incident, Carlo Valdinocci, a former editor of Cronaca Sovversiva, was killed when the bomb intended for Palmer exploded in the editor's hands. Radical pamphlets entitled "Plain Words" signed "The Anarchist Fighters" were found at the scene of this and several other midnight bombings that night.[17]

Several Galleanist associates were suspected or interrogated about their roles in the bombing incidents. Two days before Sacco and Vanzetti were arrested, a Galleanist named Andrea Salsedo fell to his death from the US Justice Department's Bureau of Investigation (BOI) offices on the 14th floor of 15 Park Row in New York City.[18] Salsedo had worked in the Canzani Printshop in Brooklyn, to where federal agents traced the "Plain Words" leaflet.[18]

Roberto Elia, a fellow New York printer and admitted anarchist,[19] was later deposed in the inquiry, and testified that Salsedo had committed suicide for fear of betraying the others. He portrayed himself as the 'strong' one who had resisted the police.[20] According to anarchist writer Carlo Tresca, Elia changed his story later, stating that Federal agents had thrown Salsedo out the window.[21]

Robbery Edit

 
.38 Harrington & Richardson top break revolver similar to pistol carried by Berardelli
 
.32 Colt Model 1903 automatic pistol
 
.32 Savage Model 1907 semi-automatic pistol

The Slater-Morrill Shoe Company factory was located on Pearl Street in Braintree, Massachusetts. On April 15, 1920, two men were robbed and killed while transporting the company's payroll in two large steel boxes to the main factory. One of them, Alessandro Berardelli[22][23]—a security guard—was shot four times[24] as he reached for his hip-holstered .38-caliber, Harrington & Richardson revolver; his gun was not recovered from the scene. The other man, Frederick Parmenter—a paymaster who was unarmed—was shot twice:[24] once in the chest and a second time, fatally, in the back as he attempted to flee.[25] The robbers seized the payroll boxes and escaped in a stolen dark blue Buick that was carrying several other men.[26]

As the car was being driven away by Michael Codispoti, the robbers fired wildly at company workers nearby.[25] A coroner's report and subsequent ballistic investigation revealed that six bullets removed from the murdered men's bodies were of .32 automatic (ACP) caliber. Five of these .32-caliber bullets were all fired from a single semi-automatic pistol, a .32-caliber Savage Model 1907, which used a particularly narrow-grooved barrel rifling with a right-hand twist.[25][27] Two of the bullets were recovered from Berardelli's body.[28][29] Four .32 automatic brass shell casings were found at the murder scene, manufactured by one of three firms: Peters, Winchester, or Remington. The Winchester cartridge case was of a relatively obsolete cartridge loading, which had been discontinued from production some years earlier. Two days after the robbery, police located the robbers' Buick; several 12-gauge shotgun shells were found on the ground nearby.[25]

Arrests and indictment Edit

 
Mario Buda

An earlier attempted robbery of another shoe factory occurred on December 24, 1919, in Bridgewater, Massachusetts, by people identified as Italian who used a car that was seen escaping to Cochesett in West Bridgewater. Police speculated that Italian anarchists perpetrated the robberies to finance their activities. Bridgewater police chief Michael E. Stewart suspected that known Italian anarchist Ferruccio Coacci was involved. Stewart discovered that Mario Buda (aka 'Mike' Boda) lived with Coacci.[30]

When Chief Stewart later arrived at the Coacci home, only Buda was living there, and when questioned, he said that Coacci owned a .32 Savage automatic pistol, which he kept in the kitchen.[31] A search of the kitchen did not locate the gun, but Stewart found (in a kitchen drawer) a manufacturer's technical diagram for a Model 1907 of the exact type of .32 caliber pistol used to shoot Parmenter and Berardelli.[31][32] Stewart asked Buda if he owned a gun, and the man produced a .32-caliber Spanish-made automatic pistol.[33] Buda told police that he owned a 1914 Overland automobile, which was being repaired.[31] The car was delivered for repairs four days after the Braintree crimes, but it was old and apparently had not been run for five months.[34] Tire tracks were seen near the abandoned Buick getaway car, and Chief Stewart surmised that two cars had been used in the getaway, and that Buda's car might have been the second car.[31]

When Stewart discovered that Coacci had worked for both shoe factories that had been robbed, he returned with the Bridgewater police. Mario Buda was not home,[31] but on May 5, 1920, he arrived at the garage with three other men, later identified as Sacco, Vanzetti, and Riccardo Orciani. The four men knew each other well; Buda would later refer to Sacco and Vanzetti as "the best friends I had in America".[35]

Sacco and Vanzetti boarded a streetcar, but were tracked down and soon arrested. When searched by police, both denied owning any guns, but were found to be holding loaded pistols. Sacco was found to have an Italian passport, anarchist literature, a loaded .32 Colt Model 1903 automatic pistol, and twenty-three .32 automatic cartridges in his possession; several of those bullet cases were of the same obsolescent type as the empty Winchester .32 casing found at the crime scene, and others were manufactured by the firms of Peters and Remington, much like other casings found at the scene.[25] Vanzetti had four 12-gauge shotgun shells[33] and a five-shot nickel-plated .38-caliber Harrington & Richardson revolver similar to the .38 carried by Berardelli, the slain Braintree guard, whose weapon was not found at the scene of the crime.[25] When they were questioned, the pair denied any connection to anarchists.[citation needed]

Orciani was arrested May 6, but gave the alibi that he had been at work on the day of both crimes. Sacco had been at work on the day of the Bridgewater crimes but said that he had the day off on April 15—the day of the Braintree crimes—and was charged with those murders. The self-employed Vanzetti had no such alibis and was charged for the attempted robbery and attempted murder in Bridgewater and the robbery and murder in the Braintree crimes.[36] Sacco and Vanzetti were charged with the crime of murder on May 5, 1920, and indicted four months later on September 14.[37]

Following Sacco and Vanzetti's indictment for murder for the Braintree robbery, Galleanists and anarchists in the United States and abroad began a campaign of violent retaliation. Two days later on September 16, 1920, Mario Buda allegedly orchestrated the Wall Street bombing, where a time-delay dynamite bomb packed with heavy iron sash-weights in a horse-drawn cart exploded, killing 38 people and wounding 134.[30][38] In 1921, a booby trap bomb mailed to the American ambassador in Paris exploded, wounding his valet.[39] For the next six years, bombs exploded at other American embassies all over the world.[40]

Trials Edit

Bridgewater crimes trial Edit

Rather than accept court-appointed counsel, Vanzetti chose to be represented by John P. Vahey, a former foundry superintendent and future state court judge who had been practicing law since 1905, most notably with his brother James H. Vahey and his law partner Charles Hiller Innes.[41] James Graham, who was recommended by supporters, also served as defense counsel.[36][42] Frederick G. Katzmann, the Norfolk and Plymouth County District Attorney, prosecuted the case.[43] The presiding judge was Webster Thayer, who was already assigned to the court before this case was scheduled. A few weeks earlier he had given a speech to new American citizens decrying Bolshevism and anarchism's threat to American institutions. He supported the suppression of functionally violent radical speech, and incitement to commit violent acts.[36][44][45][46] He was known to dislike foreigners but was considered to be a fair judge.[47]

The trial began on June 22, 1920. The prosecution presented several witnesses who put Vanzetti at the scene of the crime. Their descriptions varied, especially with respect to the shape and length of Vanzetti's mustache.[48] Physical evidence included a shotgun shell retrieved at the scene of the crime and several shells found on Vanzetti when he was arrested.[49]

The defense produced 16 witnesses, all Italians from Plymouth, who testified that at the time of the attempted robbery they had bought eels from Vanzetti for Eastertide, in accordance with their traditions. Such details reinforced the difference between the Italians and the jurors. Some testified in imperfect English, others through an interpreter, whose inability to speak the same dialect of Italian as the witnesses hampered his effectiveness. On cross examination, the prosecution found it easy to make the witnesses appear confused about dates. A boy who testified admitted to rehearsing his testimony. "You learned it just like a piece at school?" the prosecutor asked. "Sure", he replied.[50] The defense tried to rebut the eyewitnesses with testimony that Vanzetti always wore his mustache in a distinctive long style, but the prosecution rebutted this.[51]

The defense case went badly and Vanzetti did not testify in his own defense.[52] During the trial, he said that his lawyers had opposed putting him on the stand.[36] That same year, defense attorney Vahey told the governor that Vanzetti had refused his advice to testify.[53] Decades later, a lawyer who assisted Vahey in the defense said that the defense attorneys left the choice to Vanzetti, but warned him that it would be difficult to prevent the prosecution from using cross examination to challenge the credibility of his character based on his political beliefs. He said that Vanzetti chose not to testify after consulting with Sacco.[36] Herbert B. Ehrmann, who later joined the defense team, wrote many years later that the dangers of putting Vanzetti on the stand were very real.[54] Another legal analysis of the case faulted the defense for not offering more to the jury by letting Vanzetti testify, concluding that by his remaining silent it "left the jury to decide between the eyewitnesses and the alibi witness without his aid. In these circumstances a verdict of not guilty would have been very unusual". That analysis claimed that "no one could say that the case was closely tried or vigorously fought for the defendant".[55]

Vanzetti complained during his sentencing on April 9, 1927, for the Braintree crimes, that Vahey "sold me for thirty golden money like Judas sold Jesus Christ."[36] He accused Vahey of having conspired with the prosecutor "to agitate still more the passion of the juror, the prejudice of the juror" towards "people of our principles, against the foreigner, against slackers."[36][56]

On July 1, 1920, the jury deliberated for five hours and returned guilty verdicts on both counts, armed robbery and first-degree murder.[36] Before sentencing, Judge Thayer learned that during deliberations, the jury had tampered with the shotgun shells found on Vanzetti at the time of his arrest to determine if the shot they contained was of sufficient size to kill a man.[36][57] Since that prejudiced the jury's verdict on the murder charge, Thayer declared that part a mistrial. On August 16, 1920, he sentenced Vanzetti on the charge of armed robbery to a term of 12 to 15 years in prison, the maximum sentence allowed.[36][54][57] An assessment[by whom?] of Thayer's conduct of the trial said "his stupid rulings as to the admissibility of conversations are about equally divided" between the two sides and thus provided no evidence of partiality.[58]

Sacco and Vanzetti both denounced Thayer. Vanzetti wrote, "I will try to see Thayer death [sic] before his pronunciation of our sentence" and asked fellow anarchists for "revenge, revenge in our names and the names of our living and dead."[59]

In 1927, advocates for Sacco and Vanzetti charged that this case was brought first because a conviction for the Bridgewater crimes would help convict him for the Braintree crimes, where evidence against him was weak. The prosecution countered that the timing was driven by the schedules of different courts that handled the cases.[60] The defense raised only minor objections in an appeal that was not accepted.[61] A few years later, Vahey joined Katzmann's law firm.[62]

Braintree crimes trial Edit

 
Norfolk County Courthouse, Dedham, Massachusetts, site of the second trial

Sacco and Vanzetti went on trial for their lives on May 21, 1921, at Dedham, Norfolk County, Massachusetts, for the Braintree robbery and murders. Webster Thayer again presided; he had asked to be assigned to the trial. Katzmann again prosecuted for the State. Vanzetti was represented by brothers Jeremiah and Thomas McAnraney. Sacco was represented by Fred H. Moore and William J. Callahan. The choice of Moore, a former attorney for the Industrial Workers of the World, proved a key mistake for the defense. A notorious radical from California, Moore quickly enraged Judge Thayer with his courtroom demeanor, often doffing his jacket and once, his shoes. Reporters covering the case were amazed to hear Judge Thayer, during a lunch recess, proclaim, "I'll show them that no long-haired anarchist from California can run this court!" and later, "You wait till I give my charge to the jury. I'll show them."[63] Throughout the trial, Moore and Thayer clashed repeatedly over procedure and decorum.[citation needed]

Authorities anticipated a possible bomb attack and had the Dedham courtroom outfitted with heavy, sliding steel doors and cast-iron shutters that were painted to appear wooden.[64][65] Each day during the trial, the courthouse was placed under heavy police security, and Sacco and Vanzetti were escorted to and from the courtroom by armed guards.[65]

The Commonwealth relied on evidence that Sacco was absent from his work in a shoe factory on the day of the murders; that the defendants were in the neighborhood of the Braintree robbery-murder scene on the morning when it occurred, being identified as having been there seen separately and also together; that the Buick getaway car was also in the neighborhood and that Vanzetti was near and in it; that Sacco was seen near the scene of the murders before they occurred and also was seen to shoot Berardelli after Berardelli fell and that that shot caused his death; that used shell casings were left at the scene of the murders, some of which could have been found to have been discharged from a .32 pistol afterwards found on Sacco; that a cap was found at the scene of the murders, which witnesses identified as resembling one formerly worn by Sacco; and that both men were members of anarchist cells that espoused violence, including assassination.[66] Among the more important witnesses called by the prosecution was salesman Carlos E. Goodridge, who stated that as the getaway car raced within twenty-five feet of him, one of the car's occupants, whom he identified as being Sacco, pointed a gun in his direction.[67]

Both defendants offered alibis that were backed by several witnesses. Vanzetti testified that he had been selling fish at the time of the Braintree robbery. Sacco testified that he had been in Boston applying for a passport at the Italian consulate. He stated he had lunched in Boston's North End with several friends, each of whom testified on his behalf. Prior to the trial, Sacco's lawyer, Fred Moore, went to great lengths to contact the consulate employee whom Sacco said he had talked with on the afternoon of the crime. Once contacted in Italy, the clerk said he remembered Sacco because of the unusually large passport photo he presented. The clerk also remembered the date, April 15, 1920, but he refused to return to the United States to testify (a trip requiring two ship voyages), citing his ill health. Instead he executed a sworn deposition that was read aloud in court and quickly dismissed.[citation needed]

Much of the trial focused on material evidence, notably bullets, guns, and the cap. Prosecution witnesses testified that Bullet III, the .32-caliber bullet that had fatally wounded Berardelli, was from a discontinued Winchester .32 Auto cartridge loading so obsolete that the only bullets similar to it that anyone could locate to make comparisons were those found in the cartridges in Sacco's pockets.[68] Prosecutor Frederick Katzmann decided to participate in a forensic bullet examination using bullets test-fired from Sacco's .32 Colt Automatic after the defense arranged for such tests. Sacco, saying he had nothing to hide, had allowed his gun to be test-fired, with experts for both sides present, during the trial's second week. The prosecution matched bullets fired through the gun to those taken from one of the slain men.[citation needed]

In court, District Attorney Katzmann called two forensic gun expert witnesses, Capt. Charles Van Amburgh of Springfield Armory and Capt. William Proctor of the Massachusetts State Police, who testified that they believed that of the four bullets recovered from Berardelli's body, Bullet III—the fatal bullet—exhibited rifling marks consistent with those found on bullets fired from Sacco's .32 Colt Automatic pistol.[28] In rebuttal, two defense forensic gun experts testified that Bullet III did not match any of the test bullets from Sacco's Colt.[69] After the trial, Capt. Proctor signed an affidavit stating that he could not positively identify Sacco's .32 Colt as the only pistol that could have fired Bullet III. This meant that Bullet III could have been fired from any of the 300,000 .32 Colt Automatic pistols then in circulation.[70][71] All witnesses to the shooting testified that they saw one gunman shoot Berardelli four times, yet the defense never questioned how only one of four bullets found in the deceased guard was identified as being fired from Sacco's Colt.[28]

Vanzetti was being tried under Massachusetts' felony-murder rule, and the prosecution sought to implicate him in the Braintree robbery by the testimony of several witnesses: one testified that he was in the getaway car, and others who stated they saw Vanzetti in the vicinity of the Braintree factory around the time of the robbery.[25] No direct evidence tied Vanzetti's .38 nickel-plated Harrington & Richardson five-shot revolver to the crime scene, except for the fact that it was identical in type and appearance to one owned by the slain guard Berardelli, which was missing from the crime scene.[66][72] All six bullets recovered from the victims were .32 caliber, fired from at least two different automatic pistols.[73]

The prosecution claimed Vanzetti's .38 revolver had originally belonged to the slain Berardelli, and that it had been taken from his body during the robbery. No one testified to seeing anyone take the gun, but Berardelli had an empty holster and no gun on him when he was found.[25] Additionally, witnesses to the payroll shooting had described Berardelli as reaching for his gun on his hip when he was cut down by pistol fire from the robbers.[25]

District Attorney Katzmann pointed out that Vanzetti had lied at the time of his arrest, when making statements about the .38 revolver found in his possession. He claimed that the revolver was his own, and that he carried it for self-protection, yet he incorrectly described it to police as a six-shot revolver instead of a five-shot.[25] Vanzetti also told police that he had purchased only one box of cartridges for the gun, all of the same make, yet his revolver was loaded with five .38 cartridges of varying brands.[25] At the time of his arrest, Vanzetti also claimed that he had bought the gun at a store (but could not remember which one), and that it cost $18 or $19 (three times its actual market value).[74] He lied about where he had obtained the .38 cartridges found in the revolver.[25]

The prosecution traced the history of Berardelli's .38 Harrington & Richardson (H&R) revolver. Berardelli's wife testified that she and her husband dropped off the gun for repair at the Iver Johnson Co. of Boston a few weeks before the murder.[66] According to the foreman of the Iver Johnson repair shop, Berardelli's revolver was given a repair tag with the number of 94765, and this number was recorded in the repair logbook with the statement "H. & R. revolver, .38-calibre, new hammer, repairing, half an hour".[66] However, the shop books did not record the gun's serial number, and the caliber was apparently incorrectly labeled as .32 instead of .38-caliber.[66][75] The shop foreman testified that a new spring and hammer were put into Berardelli's Harrington & Richardson revolver. The gun was claimed and the half-hour repair paid for, though the date and identity of the claimant were not recorded.[66] After examining Vanzetti's .38 revolver, the foreman testified that Vanzetti's gun had a new replacement hammer in keeping with the repair performed on Berardelli's revolver.[76] The foreman explained that the shop was always kept busy repairing 20 to 30 revolvers per day, which made it very hard to remember individual guns or keep reliable records of when they were picked up by their owners.[25] But, he said that unclaimed guns were sold by Iver Johnson at the end of each year, and the shop had no record of an unclaimed gun sale of Berardelli's revolver.[76] To reinforce the conclusion that Berardelli had reclaimed his revolver from the repair shop, the prosecution called a witness who testified that he had seen Berardelli in possession of a .38 nickel-plated revolver the Saturday night before the Braintree robbery.[66]

After hearing testimony from the repair shop employee that "the repair shop had no record of Berardelli picking up the gun, the gun was not in the shop nor had it been sold", the defense put Vanzetti on the stand where he testified that "he had actually bought the gun several months earlier from fellow anarchist Luigi Falzini for five dollars"—in contradiction to what he had told police upon his arrest.[66][74] This was corroborated by Luigi Falzini (Falsini), a friend of Vanzetti's and a fellow Galleanist, who stated that, after buying the .38 revolver from one Riccardo Orciani,[77] he sold it to Vanzetti.[66][74][78] The defense also called two expert witnesses, a Mr. Burns and a Mr. Fitzgerald, who each testified that no new spring and hammer had ever been installed in the revolver found in Vanzetti's possession.[66]

The District Attorney's final piece of material evidence was a flop-eared cap claimed to have been Sacco's. Sacco tried the cap on in court and, according to two newspaper sketch artists who ran cartoons the next day, it was too small, sitting high on his head. But Katzmann insisted the cap fitted Sacco and, noting a hole in the back where Sacco had hung the cap on a nail each day, continued to refer to it as his, and in denying later appeals, Judge Thayer often cited the cap as material evidence. During the 1927 Lowell Commission investigation, however, Braintree's Police Chief admitted that he had torn the cap open upon finding it at the crime scene a full day after the murders. Doubting the cap was Sacco's, the chief told the commission it could not have lain in the street "for thirty hours with the State Police, the local police, and two or three thousand people there."[79]

 
Protest for Sacco and Vanzetti in London, 1921

Controversy clouded the prosecution witnesses who identified Sacco as having been at the scene of the crime. One, a bookkeeper named Mary Splaine, precisely described Sacco as the man she saw firing from the getaway car. From Felix Frankfurter's account from The Atlantic Monthly article:

Viewing the scene from a distance of from sixty to eighty feet, she saw a man previously unknown to her in a car traveling at the rate of from fifteen to eighteen miles per hour, and she saw him only for a distance of about thirty feet—that is to say, for from one and a half to three seconds.[80]

Yet cross examination revealed that Splaine was unable to identify Sacco at the inquest but had recall of great details of Sacco's appearance over a year later. While a few others singled out Sacco or Vanzetti as the men they had seen at the scene of the crime, far more witnesses, both prosecution and defense, could not identify them.[81]

The defendants' radical politics may have played a role in the verdict. Judge Thayer, though a sworn enemy of anarchists, warned the defense against bringing anarchism into the trial. Yet defense attorney Fred Moore felt he had to call both Sacco and Vanzetti as witnesses to let them explain why they were fully armed when arrested. Both men testified that they had been rounding up radical literature when apprehended, and that they had feared another government deportation raid. Yet both hurt their case with rambling discourses on radical politics that the prosecution mocked. The prosecution also brought out that both men had fled the draft by going to Mexico in 1917.[81]

On July 21, 1921, the jury deliberated for three hours, broke for dinner, and then returned the guilty verdicts. Supporters later insisted that Sacco and Vanzetti had been convicted for their anarchist views, yet every juror insisted that anarchism had played no part in their decision to convict the two men. At that time, a first-degree murder conviction in Massachusetts was punishable by death. Sacco and Vanzetti were bound for the electric chair unless the defense could find new evidence.[citation needed]

The verdicts and the likelihood of death sentences immediately roused international opinion. Demonstrations were held in 60 Italian cities and a flood of mail was sent to the American embassy in Paris. Demonstrations followed in a number of Latin American cities.[82] Anatole France, veteran of the campaign for Alfred Dreyfus and recipient of the 1921 Nobel Prize for Literature, wrote an "Appeal to the American People": "The death of Sacco and Vanzetti will make martyrs of them and cover you with shame. You are a great people. You ought to be a just people."[83]

Jury Edit

The 12 jurors were sequestered at the courthouse for the entirety of the six week trial.[84] They slept on cots in the courthouse's gran jury room and bathed in the basement of the jail.[84] To celebrate the 4th of July, they were brought to Scituate, Massachusetts and given a lobster dinner.[84]

To get a full jury, courthouse officials had to go to extraordinary lengths. Over 600 men were interviewed, with the most common reason for dismissal being their opposition to the death penalty.[84] One man, a sugar dealer, tried to pretend that he was deaf in an attempt to get out of serving on the jury. When he was discovered, by answering a question posed by the judge, Sacco and Vanzetti were sent into fits of laughter.[84]

After 500 potential jurors were interviewed, but only seven selected, deputies from the Norfolk County Sheriff's office went out to workplaces, club meetings, concerts, and elsewhere to bring in additional potential jurors.[84] One man, ultimately selected, was brought from his wedding dinner.[84] The Quincy man had to postpone his honeymoon until after the trial.[84]

Defense committee Edit

In 1921, most of the nation had not yet heard of Sacco and Vanzetti. Brief mention of the conviction appeared on page three of The New York Times. Defense attorney Moore radicalized and politicized the process by discussing Sacco and Vanzetti's anarchist beliefs, attempting to suggest that they were prosecuted primarily for their political beliefs and the trial was part of a government plan to stop the anarchist movement in the United States. His efforts helped stir up support but were so costly that he was eventually dismissed from the defense team.[85]

The Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee was formed on May 9, 1920, immediately following the arrests, by a group of fellow anarchists, headed by Vanzetti's 23-year-old friend Aldino Felicani. Over the next seven years, it raised $300,000.[86] Defense attorney Fred Moore drew on its funds for his investigations.[87] Differences arose when Moore tried to determine who had committed the Braintree crimes over objections from anarchists that he was doing the government's work. After the Committee hired William G. Thompson to manage the legal defense, he objected to its propaganda efforts.[88]

A Defense Committee publicist wrote an article about the first trial that was published in The New Republic. In the winter of 1920–1921, the Defense Committee sent stories to labor union publications every week. It produced pamphlets with titles like Fangs at Labor's Throat, sometimes printing thousands of copies. It sent speakers to Italian communities in factory towns and mining camps.[89] The Committee eventually added staff from outside the anarchist movement, notably Mary Donovan, who had experience as a labor leader and Sinn Féin organizer.[90] In 1927, she and Felicani together recruited Gardner Jackson, a Boston Globe reporter from a wealthy family, to manage publicity and serve as a mediator between the Committee's anarchists and the growing number of supporters with more liberal political views, who included socialites, lawyers, and intellectuals.[91]

Jackson bridged the gap between the radicals and the social elite so well that Sacco thanked him a few weeks before his execution:

We are one heart, but unfortunately we represent two different class. ... But, whenever the heart of one of the upper class join with the exploited workers for the struggle of the right in the human feeling is the feel of an spontaneous attraction and brotherly love to one another.[92]

The noted American author John Dos Passos joined the committee and wrote its 127-page official review of the case: Facing the Chair: Story of Americanization of Two Foreignborn Workmen.[93] Dos Passos concluded it "barely possible" that Sacco might have committed murder as part of a class war, but that the soft-hearted Vanzetti was clearly innocent. "Nobody in his right mind who was planning such a crime would take a man like that along", Dos Passos wrote of Vanzetti.[94] After the executions, the Committee continued its work, helping to gather material that eventually appeared as The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti.[95]

Motions for a new trial Edit

Multiple separate motions for a new trial were denied by Judge Thayer.[96] One motion, the so-called Hamilton-Proctor motion, involved the forensic ballistic evidence presented by the expert witnesses for the prosecution and defense. The prosecution's firearms expert, Charles Van Amburgh, had re-examined the evidence in preparation for the motion. By 1923, bullet-comparison technology had improved somewhat, and Van Amburgh submitted photos of the bullets fired from Sacco's .32 Colt in support of the argument that they matched the bullet that killed Berardelli. In response, the controversial[97][98] self-proclaimed "firearms expert" for the defense, Albert H. Hamilton,[97] conducted an in-court demonstration involving two brand new Colt .32-caliber automatic pistols belonging to Hamilton, along with Sacco's .32 Colt of the same make and caliber. In front of Judge Thayer and the lawyers for both sides, Hamilton disassembled all three pistols and placed the major component parts—barrel, barrel bushing, recoil spring, frame, slide, and magazine—into three piles on the table before him.[99][100][101] He explained the functions of each part and began to demonstrate how each was interchangeable, in the process intermingling the parts of all three pistols.[100] Judge Thayer stopped Hamilton and demanded that he reassemble Sacco's pistol with its proper parts.[100]

Other motions focused on the jury foreman and a prosecution ballistics expert. In 1923, the defense filed an affidavit from a friend of the jury foreman, who swore that prior to the trial, the jury foreman had allegedly said of Sacco and Vanzetti, "Damn them, they ought to hang them anyway!" That same year, the defense read to the court an affidavit by Captain William Proctor (who had died shortly after conclusion of the trial) in which Proctor stated that he could not say that Bullet III was fired by Sacco's .32 Colt pistol.[71] At the conclusion of the appeal hearings, Thayer denied all motions for a new trial on October 1, 1924.[102]

Several months later, in February 1924, Judge Thayer asked one of the firearms experts for the prosecution, Capt. Charles Van Amburgh, to reinspect Sacco's Colt and determine its condition. With District Attorney Katzmann present, Van Amburgh took the gun from the clerk and started to take it apart.[100] Van Amburgh quickly noticed that the barrel to Sacco's gun was brand new, being still covered in the manufacturer's protective rust preventative.[100] Judge Thayer began private hearings to determine who had tampered with the evidence by switching the barrel on Sacco's gun. During three weeks of hearings, Albert Hamilton and Captain Van Amburgh squared off, challenging each other's authority. Testimony suggested that Sacco's gun had been treated with little care, and frequently disassembled for inspection. New defense attorney William Thompson insisted that no one on his side could have switched the barrels "unless they wanted to run their necks into a noose."[103] Albert Hamilton swore he had only taken the gun apart while being watched by Judge Thayer. Judge Thayer made no finding as to who had switched the .32 Colt barrels, but ordered the rusty barrel returned to Sacco's Colt.[100] After the hearing concluded, unannounced to Judge Thayer, Captain Van Amburgh took both Sacco's and Vanzetti's guns, along with the bullets and shells involved in the crime to his home where he kept them until a Boston Globe exposé revealed the misappropriation in 1960. Meanwhile, Van Amburgh bolstered his own credentials by writing an article on the case for True Detective Mysteries. The 1935 article charged that prior to the discovery of the gun barrel switch, Albert Hamilton had tried to walk out of the courtroom with Sacco's gun but was stopped by Judge Thayer. Although several historians of the case, including Francis Russell, have reported this story as factual, nowhere in transcripts of the private hearing on the gun barrel switch was this incident ever mentioned. The same year the True Detective article was published, a study of ballistics in the case concluded, "what might have been almost indubitable evidence was in fact rendered more than useless by the bungling of the experts."[104]

Appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court Edit

The defense appealed Thayer's denial of their motions to the Supreme Judicial Court (SJC), the highest level of the state's judicial system. Both sides presented arguments to its five judges on January 11–13, 1926.[102] The SJC returned a unanimous ruling on May 12, 1926, upholding Judge Thayer's decisions.[102][105] The Court did not have the authority to review the trial record as a whole or to judge the fairness of the case. Instead, the judges considered only whether Thayer had abused his discretion in the course of the trial. Thayer later claimed that the SJC had "approved" the verdicts, which advocates for the defendants protested as a misinterpretation of the Court's ruling, which only found "no error" in his individual rulings.[106]

Medeiros confession Edit

In November 1925, Celestino Medeiros, an ex-convict awaiting trial for murder, confessed to committing the Braintree crimes. He absolved Sacco and Vanzetti of participation.[107] In May, once the SJC had denied their appeal and Medeiros was convicted, the defense investigated the details of Medeiros' story. Police interviews led them to the Morelli gang based in Providence, Rhode Island. They developed an alternative theory of the crime based on the gang's history of shoe-factory robberies, connections to a car like that used in Braintree, and other details. Gang leader Joe Morelli bore a striking resemblance to Sacco.[108][109][110]

The defense filed a motion for a new trial based on the Medeiros confession on May 26, 1926.[102] In support of their motion they included 64 affidavits. The prosecution countered with 26 affidavits.[111] When Thayer heard arguments from September 13 to 17, 1926,[102] the defense, along with their Medeiros-Morelli theory of the crime, charged that the U.S. Justice Department was aiding the prosecution by withholding information obtained in its own investigation of the case. Attorney William Thompson made an explicitly political attack: "A government which has come to value its own secrets more than it does the lives of its citizens has become a tyranny, whether you call it a republic, a monarchy, or anything else!"[112] Judge Thayer denied this motion for a new trial on October 23, 1926. After arguing against the credibility of Medeiros, he addressed the defense claims against the federal government, saying the defense was suffering from "a new type of disease, ... a belief in the existence of something which in fact and truth has no such existence."[102][113]

Three days later, the Boston Herald responded to Thayer's decision by reversing its longstanding position and calling for a new trial. Its editorial, "We Submit", earned its author a Pulitzer Prize.[114][115] No other newspapers followed suit.[116]

Second appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court Edit

The defense promptly appealed again to the Supreme Judicial Court and presented their arguments on January 27 and 28, 1927.[102] While the appeal was under consideration, Harvard law professor and future Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter published an article in the Atlantic Monthly arguing for a retrial. He noted that the SJC had already taken a very narrow view of its authority when considering the first appeal, and called upon the court to review the entire record of the case. He called their attention to Thayer's lengthy statement that accompanied his denial of the Medeiros appeal, describing it as "a farrago of misquotations, misrepresentations, suppressions, and mutilations" that were "honeycombed with demonstrable errors."[117]

At the same time, Major Calvin Goddard was a ballistics expert who had helped pioneer the use of the comparison microscope in forensic ballistic research. He offered to conduct an independent examination of the gun and bullet forensic evidence by using techniques that he had developed for use with the comparison microscope.[118] Goddard first offered to conduct a new forensic examination for the defense, which rejected it, and then to the prosecution, which accepted his offer.[118] Using the comparison microscope, Goddard compared Bullet III and a .32 Auto shell casing found at the Braintree shooting with that of several .32 Auto test cartridges fired from Sacco's .32 Colt automatic pistol.[70][118] Goddard concluded that not only did Bullet III match the rifling marks found on the barrel of Sacco's .32 Colt pistol, but that scratches made by the firing pin of Sacco's .32 Colt on the primers of spent shell casings test-fired from Sacco's Colt matched those found on the primer of a spent shell casing recovered at the Braintree murder scene.[70][118] More sophisticated comparative examinations in 1935, 1961, and 1983 each reconfirmed the opinion that the bullet the prosecution said killed Berardelli and one of the cartridge cases introduced into evidence were fired in Sacco's .32 Colt automatic.[70] However, in his book on new evidence in the Sacco and Vanzetti case, historian David E. Kaiser wrote that Bullet III and its shell casing, as presented, had been substituted by the prosecution and were not genuinely from the scene.[119]

The Supreme Judicial Court denied the Medeiros appeal on April 5, 1927.[102] Summarizing the decision, The New York Times said that the SJC had determined that "the judge had a right to rule as he did" but that the SJC "did not deny the validity of the new evidence".[120] The SJC also said: "It is not imperative that a new trial be granted even though evidence is newly discovered and, if presented to a jury, would justify a different verdict."[121]

Protests and advocacy Edit

In 1924, referring to his denial of motions for a new trial, Judge Thayer confronted a Massachusetts lawyer: "Did you see what I did with those anarchistic bastards the other day?" the judge said. "I guess that will hold them for a while! Let them go and see now what they can get out of the Supreme Court!" The outburst remained a secret until 1927 when its release fueled the arguments of Sacco and Vanzetti's defenders. The New York World attacked Thayer as "an agitated little man looking for publicity and utterly impervious to the ethical standards one has the right to expect of a man presiding in a capital case."[122]

Many socialists and intellectuals campaigned for a retrial without success. John Dos Passos came to Boston to cover the case as a journalist, stayed to author a pamphlet called Facing the Chair,[123] and was arrested in a demonstration on August 10, 1927, along with writer Dorothy Parker, trade union organizer and Socialist Party leader Powers Hapgood and activist Catharine Sargent Huntington.[124][125] After being arrested while picketing the State House, the poet Edna St. Vincent Millay pleaded her case to the governor in person and then wrote an appeal: "I cry to you with a million voices: answer our doubt ... There is need in Massachusetts of a great man tonight."[126]

Others who wrote to Fuller or signed petitions included Albert Einstein, George Bernard Shaw and H. G. Wells.[127] The president of the American Federation of Labor cited "the long period of time intervening between the commission of the crime and the final decision of the Court" as well as "the mental and physical anguish which Sacco and Vanzetti must have undergone during the past seven years" in a telegram to the governor.[128]

Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, the target of two anarchist assassination attempts, quietly made inquiries through diplomatic channels and was prepared to ask Governor Fuller to commute the sentences if it appeared his request would be granted.[129][130]

In 1926, a bomb presumed to be the work of anarchists destroyed the house of Samuel Johnson, the brother of Simon Johnson and garage owner that called police the night of Sacco and Vanzetti's arrest.[131]

In August 1927, the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) called for a three-day nationwide walkout to protest the pending executions.[132] The most notable response came in the Walsenburg coal district of Colorado, where 1,132 out of 1,167 miners participated in the walkout. It led to the Colorado coal strike of 1927.[133]

Defendants in prison Edit

 
Charlestown State Prison, 1900

For their part, Sacco and Vanzetti seemed to alternate between moods of defiance, vengeance, resignation, and despair. The June 1926 issue of Protesta Umana, published by their Defense Committee, carried an article signed by Sacco and Vanzetti that appealed for retaliation by their colleagues. In the article, Vanzetti wrote, "I will try to see Thayer death [sic] before his pronunciation of our sentence", and asked fellow anarchists for "revenge, revenge in our names and the names of our living and dead."[134] The article made a reference to La Salute è in voi!, the title of Galleani's bomb-making manual.

 
The Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee newspaper relays a message from Sacco and Vanzetti: "La Salute è in voi!"

Both wrote dozens of letters asserting their innocence, insisting they had been framed because they were anarchists. Their conduct in prison consistently impressed guards and wardens. In 1927, the Dedham jail chaplain wrote to the head of an investigatory commission that he had seen no evidence of guilt or remorse on Sacco's part. Vanzetti impressed fellow prisoners at Charlestown State Prison as a bookish intellectual, incapable of committing any violent crime. Novelist John Dos Passos, who visited both men in jail, observed of Vanzetti, "nobody in his right mind who was planning such a crime would take a man like that along."[135] Vanzetti developed his command of English to such a degree that journalist Murray Kempton later described him as "the greatest writer of English in our century to learn his craft, do his work, and die all in the space of seven years."[136]

During the trial, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who was then in Washington, invited Sacco's wife to stay at his home near the courthouse.[84][137][84] Sacco's seven-year-old son, Dante, would sometimes stand on the sidewalk outside the jail and play catch with his father by throwing a ball over the wall.[84]

Sentencing Edit

On April 9, 1927, Judge Thayer heard final statements from Sacco and Vanzetti. In a lengthy speech Vanzetti said:[138][139]

I would not wish to a dog or to a snake, to the most low and misfortunate creature of the earth, I would not wish to any of them what I have had to suffer for things that I am not guilty of. But my conviction is that I have suffered for things that I am guilty of. I am suffering because I am a radical and indeed I am a radical; I have suffered because I am an Italian and indeed I am an Italian ... if you could execute me two times, and if I could be reborn two other times, I would live again to do what I have done already.[140]

Thayer declared that the responsibility for the conviction rested solely with the jury's determination of guilt. "The Court has absolutely nothing to do with that question." He sentenced each of them to "suffer the punishment of death by the passage of a current of electricity through your body" during the week beginning July 10.[138] He twice postponed the execution date while the governor considered requests for clemency.[141]

On May 10, a package bomb addressed to Governor Fuller was intercepted in the Boston post office.[142]

Clemency appeal and the Governor's Advisory Committee Edit

 
Massachusetts Governor Alvan T. Fuller

In response to public protests that greeted the sentencing, Massachusetts Governor Alvan T. Fuller faced last-minute appeals to grant clemency to Sacco and Vanzetti. On June 1, 1927, he appointed an Advisory Committee of three: President Abbott Lawrence Lowell of Harvard, President Samuel Wesley Stratton of MIT, and Probate Judge Robert Grant. They were presented with the task of reviewing the trial to determine whether it had been fair. Lowell's appointment was generally well received, for though he had controversy in his past, he had also at times demonstrated an independent streak. The defense attorneys considered resigning when they determined that the Committee was biased against the defendants, but some of the defendants' most prominent supporters, including Harvard Law Professor Felix Frankfurter and Judge Julian W. Mack of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, persuaded them to stay because Lowell "was not entirely hopeless".[143]

One of the defense attorneys, though ultimately very critical of the Committee's work, thought the Committee members were not really capable of the task the Governor set for them:

No member of the Committee had the essential sophistication that comes with experience in the trial of criminal cases. ... The high positions in the community held by the members of the Committee obscured the fact that they were not really qualified to perform the difficult task assigned to them.[144]

He also thought that the Committee, particularly Lowell, imagined it could use its fresh and more powerful analytical abilities to outperform the efforts of those who had worked on the case for years, even finding evidence of guilt that professional prosecutors had discarded.[144]

Grant was another establishment figure, a probate court judge from 1893 to 1923 and an Overseer of Harvard University from 1896 to 1921, and the author of a dozen popular novels.[145] Some criticized Grant's appointment to the Committee, with one defense lawyer saying he "had a black-tie class concept of life around him", but Harold Laski in a conversation at the time found him "moderate". Others cited evidence of xenophobia in some of his novels, references to "riff-raff" and a variety of racial slurs. His biographer allows that he was "not a good choice", not a legal scholar, and handicapped by age. Stratton, the one member who was not a "Boston Brahmin", maintained the lowest public profile of the three and hardly spoke during its hearings.[146]

In their earlier appeals, the defense was limited to the trial record. The Governor's Committee, however, was not a judicial proceeding, so Judge Thayer's comments outside the courtroom could be used to demonstrate his bias. Once Thayer told reporters that "No long-haired anarchist from California can run this court!"[147] According to the affidavits of eyewitnesses, Thayer also lectured members of his clubs, calling Sacco and Vanzetti "Bolsheviki!" and saying he would "get them good and proper". During the Dedham trial's first week, Thayer said to reporters: "Did you ever see a case in which so many leaflets and circulars have been spread ... saying people couldn't get a fair trial in Massachusetts? You wait till I give my charge to the jury, I'll show them!"[148] In 1924, Thayer confronted a Massachusetts lawyer at Dartmouth, his alma mater, and said: "Did you see what I did with those anarchistic bastards the other day. I guess that will hold them for a while. ... Let them go to the Supreme Court now and see what they can get out of them."[149] The Committee knew that, following the verdict, Boston Globe reporter Frank Sibley, who had covered the trial, wrote a protest to the Massachusetts attorney general condemning Thayer's blatant bias. Thayer's behavior both inside the courtroom and outside of it had become a public issue, with the New York World attacking Thayer as "an agitated little man looking for publicity and utterly impervious to the ethical standards one has the right to expect of a man presiding in a capital case."[150]

On July 12–13, 1927, following testimony by the defense firearms expert Albert H. Hamilton before the Committee, the Assistant District Attorney for Massachusetts, Dudley P. Ranney, took the opportunity to cross-examine Hamilton. He submitted affidavits questioning Hamilton's credentials as well as his performance during the New York trial of Charles Stielow, in which Hamilton's testimony linking rifling marks to a bullet used to kill the victim nearly sent an innocent man to the electric chair.[97][151] The Committee also heard from Braintree's police chief who told them he had found the cap on Pearl Street, allegedly dropped by Sacco during the crime, a full 24-hours after the getaway car had fled the scene. The chief doubted the cap belonged to Sacco and called the whole trial a contest "to see who could tell the biggest lies."[152]

After two weeks of hearing witnesses and reviewing evidence, the Committee determined that the trial had been fair and a new trial was not warranted. They assessed the charges against Thayer as well. Their criticism, using words provided by Judge Grant,[153] was direct: "He ought not to have talked about the case off the bench, and doing so was a grave breach of judicial decorum." But they also found some of the charges about his statements unbelievable or exaggerated, and they determined that anything he might have said had no impact on the trial. The panel's reading of the trial transcript convinced them that Thayer "tried to be scrupulously fair". The Committee also reported that the trial jurors were almost unanimous in praising Thayer's conduct of the trial.[154]

A defense attorney later noted ruefully that the release of the Committee's report "abruptly stilled the burgeoning doubts among the leaders of opinion in New England."[155] Supporters of the convicted men denounced the Committee. Harold Laski told Holmes that the Committee's work showed that Lowell's "loyalty to his class ... transcended his ideas of logic and justice."[156]

 
The Sacco e Vanzetti monument in Carrara.

Defense attorneys William G. Thompson and Herbert B. Ehrmann stepped down from the case in August 1927 and were replaced by Arthur D. Hill.[157]

Execution and funeral Edit

The executions were scheduled for midnight between August 22 and 23, 1927. On August 15, a bomb exploded at the home of one of the Dedham jurors.[158] On Sunday, August 21, more than 20,000 protesters assembled on Boston Common.[159]

Sacco and Vanzetti awaited execution in their cells at Charlestown State Prison, and both men refused a priest several times on their last day, as they were atheists.[160][161] Their attorney William Thompson asked Vanzetti to make a statement opposing violent retaliation for his death and they discussed forgiving one's enemies.[162] Thompson also asked Vanzetti to swear to his and Sacco's innocence one last time, and Vanzetti did. Celestino Medeiros, whose execution had been delayed in case his testimony was required at another trial of Sacco and Vanzetti, was executed first. Sacco was next and walked quietly to the electric chair, then shouted "Farewell, mother."[5][163] Vanzetti, in his final moments, shook hands with guards and thanked them for their kind treatment, read a statement proclaiming his innocence, and finally said, "I wish to forgive some people for what they are now doing to me."[5][164] Following the executions, death masks were made of the men.[165]

Violent demonstrations swept through many cities the next day, including Geneva, London, Paris, Amsterdam, and Tokyo. In South America wildcat strikes closed factories. Three died in Germany, and protesters in Johannesburg burned an American flag outside the American embassy.[166] It has been alleged that some of these activities were organized by the Communist Party.[167]

At Langone Funeral Home in Boston's North End, more than 10,000 mourners viewed Sacco and Vanzetti in open caskets over two days. At the funeral parlor, a wreath over the caskets announced In attesa l'ora della vendetta (Awaiting the hour of vengeance). On Sunday, August 28, a two-hour funeral procession bearing huge floral tributes moved through the city. Thousands of marchers took part in the procession, and over 200,000 came out to watch.[168] Police blocked the route, which passed the State House, and at one point mourners and the police clashed. The hearses reached Forest Hills Cemetery where, after a brief eulogy, the bodies were cremated.[169] The Boston Globe called it "one of the most tremendous funerals of modern times".[170]Will H. Hays, head of the motion picture industry's umbrella organization, ordered all film of the funeral procession destroyed.[171]

Sacco's ashes were sent to Torremaggiore, the town of his birth, where they are interred at the base of a monument erected in 1998. Vanzetti's ashes were buried with his mother in Villafalletto.[172]

Continuing protests and analyses Edit

Italian anarchist Severino Di Giovanni, one of the most vocal supporters of Sacco and Vanzetti in Argentina, bombed the American embassy in Buenos Aires a few hours after the two men were sentenced to death.[173] A few days after the executions, Sacco's widow thanked Di Giovanni by letter for his support and added that the director of the tobacco firm Combinados had offered to produce a cigarette brand named "Sacco & Vanzetti".[173] On November 26, 1927, Di Giovanni and others bombed a Combinados tobacco shop.[173] On December 24, 1927, Di Giovanni blew up the headquarters of The National City Bank of New York and of the Bank of Boston in Buenos Aires in apparent protest of the execution.[173] In December 1928, Di Giovanni and others failed in an attempt to bomb the train in which President-elect Herbert Hoover was traveling during his visit to Argentina.[173]

Three months later, bombs exploded in the New York City Subway, in a Philadelphia church, and at the home of the mayor of Baltimore. The house of one of the jurors in the Dedham trial was bombed, throwing him and his family from their beds. On May 18, 1928, a bomb destroyed the front porch of the home of executioner Robert Elliott.[174] As late as 1932, Judge Thayer's home was wrecked and his wife and housekeeper were injured in a bomb blast.[175] Afterward, Thayer lived permanently at his club in Boston, guarded 24 hours a day until his death on April 18, 1933.

In October 1927, H. G. Wells wrote an essay that discussed the case at length. He called it "a case like the Dreyfus case, by which the soul of a people is tested and displayed." He felt that Americans failed to understand what about the case roused European opinion:[176]

The guilt or innocence of these two Italians is not the issue that has excited the opinion of the world. Possibly they were actual murderers, and still more possibly they knew more than they would admit about the crime. ... Europe is not "retrying" Sacco and Vanzetti or anything of the sort. It is saying what it thinks of Judge Thayer. Executing political opponents as political opponents after the fashion of Mussolini and Moscow we can understand, or bandits as bandits; but this business of trying and executing murderers as Reds, or Reds as murderers, seems to be a new and very frightening line for the courts of a State in the most powerful and civilized Union on earth to pursue.

He used the case to complain that Americans were too sensitive to foreign criticism: "One can scarcely let a sentence that is not highly flattering glance across the Atlantic without some American blowing up."[176]

In 1928, Upton Sinclair published his novel Boston, an indictment of the American judicial system. He explored Vanzetti's life and writings, as its focus, and mixed fictional characters with historical participants in the trials. Though his portrait of Vanzetti was entirely sympathetic, Sinclair disappointed advocates for the defense by failing to absolve Sacco and Vanzetti of the crimes, however much he argued that their trial had been unjust.[177] Years later, he explained: "Some of the things I told displeased the fanatical believers; but having portrayed the aristocrats as they were, I had to do the same thing for the anarchists."[178][179] While doing research for the book, Sinclair was told confidentially by Sacco and Vanzetti's former lawyer Fred H. Moore that the two were guilty and that he (Moore) had supplied them with fake alibis; Sinclair was inclined to believe that that was, indeed, the case, and later referred to this as an "ethical problem", but he did not include the information about the conversation with Moore in his book.[180][181]

When the letters Sacco and Vanzetti wrote appeared in print in 1928, journalist Walter Lippmann commented: "If Sacco and Vanzetti were professional bandits, then historians and biographers who attempt to deduce character from personal documents might as well shut up shop. By every test that I know of for judging character, these are the letters of innocent men."[182] On January 3, 1929, as Gov. Fuller left the inauguration of his successor, he found a copy of the Letters thrust at him by someone in the crowd. He knocked it to the ground "with an exclamation of contempt."[183]

Intellectual and literary supporters of Sacco and Vanzetti continued to speak out. In 1936, on the day when Harvard celebrated its 300th anniversary, 28 Harvard alumni issued a statement attacking the University's retired President Lowell for his role on the Governor's Advisory Committee in 1927. They included Heywood Broun, Malcolm Cowley, Granville Hicks, and John Dos Passos.[184]

Massachusetts judicial reform Edit

Following the SJC's assertion that it could not order a new trial even if there was new evidence that "would justify a different verdict", a movement for "drastic reform" quickly took shape in Boston's legal community.[120] In December 1927, four months after the executions, the Massachusetts Judicial Council cited the Sacco and Vanzetti case as evidence of "serious defects in our methods of administering justice." It proposed a series of changes designed to appeal to both sides of the political divide, including restrictions on the number and timing of appeals. Its principal proposal addressed the SJC's right to review. It argued that a judge would benefit from a full review of a trial, and that no one man should bear the burden in a capital case. A review could defend a judge whose decisions were challenged and make it less likely that a governor would be drawn into a case. It asked for the SJC to have right to order a new trial "upon any ground if the interests of justice appear to inquire it."[185] Governor Fuller endorsed the proposal in his January 1928 annual message.[186]

The Judicial Council repeated its recommendations in 1937 and 1938. Finally, in 1939, the language it had proposed was adopted. Since that time, the SJC has been required to review all death penalty cases, to consider the entire case record, and to affirm or overturn the verdict on the law and on the evidence or "for any other reason that justice may require" (Mass. General Laws, 1939 ch. 341)[187][188][189]

Historical viewpoints Edit

Many historians, especially legal historians, have concluded the Sacco and Vanzetti prosecution, trial, and aftermath constituted a blatant disregard for political civil liberties, and especially criticize Thayer's decision to deny a retrial.

John W. Johnson has said that the authorities and jurors were influenced by strong anti-Italian prejudice and the prejudice against immigrants widely held at the time, especially in New England.[190] Against charges of racism and racial prejudice, Paul Avrich and Brenda and James Lutz point out that both men were known anarchist members of a militant organization, members of which had been conducting a violent campaign of bombing and attempted assassinations, acts condemned by most Americans of all backgrounds.[191][192] Though in general anarchist groups did not finance their militant activities through bank robberies, a fact noted by the investigators of the Bureau of Investigation, this was not true of the Galleanist group. Mario Buda readily told an interviewer: "Andavamo a prenderli dove c'erano" ("We used to go and get it [money] where it was")—meaning factories and banks.[30] The guard Berardelli was also Italian.

Johnson and Avrich suggest that the government prosecuted Sacco and Vanzetti for the robbery-murders as a convenient means to put a stop to their militant activities as Galleanists, whose bombing campaign at the time posed a lethal threat, both to the government and to many Americans.[190][193] Faced with a secretive underground group whose members resisted interrogation and believed in their cause, Federal and local officials using conventional law enforcement tactics had been repeatedly stymied in their efforts to identify all members of the group or to collect enough evidence for a prosecution.[192]

Most historians believe that Sacco and Vanzetti were involved at some level in the Galleanist bombing campaign, although their precise roles have not been determined.[30][194] In 1955, Charles Poggi, a longtime anarchist and American citizen, traveled to Savignano in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy to visit old comrades, including the Galleanists' principal bombmaker, Mario "Mike" Buda.[30] While discussing the Braintree robbery, Buda told Poggi, "Sacco c'era" (Sacco was there).[30] Poggi added that he "had a strong feeling that Buda himself was one of the robbers, though I didn't ask him and he didn't say."[195] Whether Buda and Ferruccio Coacci, whose shared rental house contained the manufacturer's diagram of a .32 Savage automatic pistol (matching the .32 Savage pistol believed to have been used to shoot both Berardelli and Parmenter), had also participated in the Braintree robbery and murders would remain a matter of speculation.[196]

Later evidence and investigations Edit

In 1941, anarchist leader Carlo Tresca, a member of the Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee, told Max Eastman, "Sacco was guilty but Vanzetti was innocent",[197] although it is clear from his statement that Tresca equated guilt only with the act of pulling the trigger, i.e., Vanzetti was not the principal triggerman in Tresca's view, but was an accomplice to Sacco. This conception of innocence is in sharp contrast to the legal one.[198] Both The Nation and The New Republic refused to publish Tresca's revelation, which Eastman said occurred after he pressed Tresca for the truth about the two men's involvement in the shooting.[197] The story finally appeared in National Review in October 1961.[199] Others who had known Tresca confirmed that he had made similar statements to them,[199] but Tresca's daughter insisted her father never hinted at Sacco's guilt. Others attributed Tresca's revelations to his disagreements with the Galleanists.[200]

Labor organizer Anthony Ramuglia, an anarchist in the 1920s, said in 1952 that a Boston anarchist group had asked him to be a false alibi witness for Sacco. After agreeing, he had remembered that he had been in jail on the day in question, so he could not testify.[201]

Both Sacco and Vanzetti had previously fled to Mexico, changing their names in order to evade draft registration, a fact the prosecutor in their murder trial used to demonstrate their lack of patriotism and which they were not allowed to rebut. Sacco and Vanzetti's supporters would later argue that the men fled the country to avoid persecution and conscription; their critics said they left to escape detection and arrest for militant and seditious activities in the United States. However, a 1953 Italian history of anarchism written by anonymous colleagues revealed a different motivation:

Several dozen Italian anarchists left the United States for Mexico. Some have suggested they did so because of cowardice. Nothing could be more false. The idea to go to Mexico arose in the minds of several comrades who were alarmed by the idea that, remaining in the United States, they would be forcibly restrained from leaving for Europe, where the revolution that had burst out in Russia that February promised to spread all over the continent.[202]

In October 1961, ballistic tests were run with improved technology on Sacco's Colt semi-automatic pistol. The results confirmed that the bullet that killed Berardelli in 1920 was fired from Sacco's pistol.[203] The Thayer court's habit of mistakenly referring to Sacco's .32 Colt pistol as well as any other automatic pistol as a "revolver" (a common custom of the day) has sometimes mystified later-generation researchers attempting to follow the forensic evidence trail.[66]

In 1987, Charlie Whipple, a former Boston Globe editorial page editor, revealed a conversation that he had with Sergeant Edward J. Seibolt in 1937. According to Whipple, Seibolt said that "we switched the murder weapon in that case", but indicated that he would deny this if Whipple ever printed it.[204][205] However, at the time of the Sacco and Vanzetti trial, Seibolt was only a patrolman, and did not work in the Boston Police ballistics department; Seibolt died in 1961 without corroborating Whipple's story.[204] In 1935, Captain Charles Van Amburgh, a key ballistics witness for the prosecution, wrote a six-part article on the case for a pulp detective magazine. Van Amburgh described a scene in which Thayer caught defense ballistics expert Hamilton trying to leave the courtroom with Sacco's gun. However, Thayer said nothing about such a move during the hearing on the gun barrel switch and refused to blame either side. Following the private hearing on the gun barrel switch, Van Amburgh kept Sacco's gun in his house, where it remained until the Boston Globe did an exposé in 1960.[206]

In 1973, a former mobster published a confession by Frank "Butsy" Morelli, Joe's brother. "We whacked them out, we killed those guys in the robbery", Butsy Morelli told Vincent Teresa. "These two greaseballs Sacco and Vanzetti took it on the chin."[207]

Before his death in June 1982, Giovanni Gambera, a member of the four-person team of anarchist leaders who met shortly after the arrest of Sacco and Vanzetti to plan their defense, told his son that "everyone [in the anarchist inner circle] knew that Sacco was guilty and that Vanzetti was innocent as far as the actual participation in killing."[208]

Months before he died, the distinguished jurist Charles E. Wyzanski, Jr., who had presided for 45 years on the U.S. District Court in Massachusetts, wrote to Russell stating, "I myself am persuaded by your writings that Sacco was guilty." The judge's assessment was significant, because he was one of Felix Frankfurter's "Hot Dogs", and Justice Frankfurter had advocated his appointment to the federal bench.[209]

The Los Angeles Times published an article on December 24, 2005, "Sinclair Letter Turns Out to Be Another Exposé", which references a newly discovered letter from Upton Sinclair to attorney John Beardsley in which Sinclair, a socialist writer famous for his muckraking novels, revealed a conversation with Fred Moore, attorney for Sacco and Vanzetti. In that conversation, in response to Sinclair's request for the truth, Moore stated that both Sacco and Vanzetti were in fact guilty, and that Moore had fabricated their alibis in an attempt to avoid a guilty verdict. The Los Angeles Times interprets subsequent letters as indicating that, to avoid loss of sales to his radical readership, particularly abroad, and due to fears for his own safety, Sinclair didn't change the premise of his novel in that respect.[210] However, Sinclair also expressed in those letters doubts as to whether Moore deserved to be trusted in the first place, and he did not actually assert the innocence of the two in the novel, focusing instead on the argument that the trial they got was not fair.[211]

Dukakis proclamation Edit

In 1977, as the 50th anniversary of the executions approached, Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis asked the Office of the Governor's Legal Counsel to report on "whether there are substantial grounds for believing—at least in the light of the legal standards of today—that Sacco and Vanzetti were unfairly convicted and executed" and to recommend appropriate action.[212] The resulting "Report to the Governor in the Matter of Sacco and Vanzetti" detailed grounds for doubting that the trial was conducted fairly in the first instance, and argued as well that such doubts were only reinforced by "later-discovered or later-disclosed evidence".[213] The report questioned prejudicial cross-examination that the trial judge allowed, the judge's hostility, the fragmentary nature of the evidence, and eyewitness testimony that came to light after the trial. It found the judge's charge to the jury troubling for the way it emphasized the defendants' behavior at the time of their arrest and highlighted certain physical evidence that was later called into question.[214] The report also dismissed the argument that the trial had been subject to judicial review, noting that "the system for reviewing murder cases at the time ... failed to provide the safeguards now present."[215]

Based on recommendations of the Office of Legal Counsel, Dukakis declared August 23, 1977, the 50th anniversary of their execution, as Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti Memorial Day.[216] His proclamation, issued in English and Italian, stated that Sacco and Vanzetti had been unfairly tried and convicted and that "any disgrace should be forever removed from their names." He did not pardon them, because that would imply they were guilty. Neither did he assert their innocence.[217][218][219] A resolution to censure Dukakis failed in the Massachusetts Senate by a vote of 23 to 12.[220] Dukakis later expressed regret only for not reaching out to the families of the victims of the crime.[221]

Later tributes Edit

 
Memorial poster, French Ave and Pearl St, Braintree, Massachusetts
 
Memorial to the victims, French Ave and Pearl St, Braintree, Massachusetts
 
A monument to the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti outside the Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, Massachusetts.

A memorial committee tried to present a plaster cast executed in 1937 by Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of Mount Rushmore, to Massachusetts governors and Boston mayors in 1937, 1947, and 1957 without success. On August 23, 1997, on the 70th anniversary of the Sacco and Vanzetti executions, Boston's first Italian-American Mayor, Thomas Menino, and the Italian-American Governor of Massachusetts, Paul Cellucci, unveiled the work at the Boston Public Library, where it remains on display.

The city's acceptance of this piece of artwork is not intended to reopen debate about the guilt or innocence of Sacco and Vanzetti," Menino said. "It is intended to remind us of the dangers of miscarried justice, and the right we all have to a fair trial.[222]

The event occasioned a renewed debate about the fairness of the trial in the editorial pages of the Boston Herald.[223]

A mosaic mural portraying the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti is installed on the main campus of Syracuse University. In Braintree, Massachusetts on the corner of French Avenue and Pearl Street, a memorial marks the site of the murders. The memorial has two exhibits. The first is a weatherproof poster that discusses the crime and the subsequent trial. The second exhibit is a metal plaque that memorializes the victims of the crime.

The "Sacco and Vanzetti Centuria" was an American anarchist military unit in the Durruti Column that fought in the Spanish Civil War.[224]

Many sites in the former USSR are named after "Sacco and Vanzetti": for example, a beer production facility in Moscow,[225] a kolkhoz in Donetsk region, Ukraine; and a street and an apartment complex in Yekaterinburg.[226] 'Sacco and Vanzetti' was also a popular brand of Russian pencil from 1930–2007. Numerous towns in Italy have streets named after Sacco and Vanzetti, including Via Sacco-Vanzetti in Torremaggiore, Sacco's home town; and Villafalletto, Vanzetti's.[227]

In Bakhmut Raion in Eastern Ukraine, there is a small village called Sakko i Vantsetti named after them, and it was occupied by Russian forces from Feb to mid-May 2023 during the Battle of Bakhmut.

In 2017, as part of an Eagle Scout project, a plaque was placed outside of Norfolk Superior Court commemorating the trial.[228]

References in popular culture Edit

 
1940s Russian pencil showing the 'Sacco & Vanzetti' name in Cyrillic lettering

Plays Edit

  • James Thurber and Elliot Nugent's 1940 play The Male Animal turns on a college professor's insistence on reading Vanzetti's statement at sentencing to his English composition class.[229] It was adapted as a film the next year, starring Henry Fonda and Olivia de Havilland.
  • In 1992, Argentinian playwright Mauricio Kartun premiered Sacco y Vanzetti: dramaturgia sumario de documentos sobre el caso, under the direction of Jaime Kogan
  • In 1999, People's Light & Theatre Company in Malvern, Pennsylvania premiered Louis Lippa's play, Sacco and Vanzetti: A Vaudeville. Directed by co-founder Ken Marini, it featured long-time company members Tom Teti and Stephen Novelli. It subsequently received productions at City Theatre of Pittsburgh; the Marin Theatre Company, San Francisco; and the Gorilla Theatre of Tampa Bay.[citation needed]
  • In 2000, the play Voices on the Wind by Eric Paul Erickson centers around the final hours of the lives of Sacco and Vanzetti. Former Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis recorded an audio clip of his public statement on the 50th anniversary for the production.[230]
  • In 2001, Anton Coppola premiered his opera Sacco and Vanzetti.[231]
  • In 2014, Joseph Silovsky wrote and performed in an Off-Broadway play about Sacco and Vanzetti, Send for the Million Men.[232]

Films and television Edit

Music Edit

Written works, paintings Edit

 
Mosaic "The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti" by Ben Shahn at Syracuse University (1967)
 
Mosaic detail of Sacco and Vanzetti lying dead in their coffins, by Ben Shahn
  • Upton Sinclair's 1928 book Boston is a fictional interpretation of the affair.[244]
  • H. G. Wells's 1928 book Mr. Blettsworthy on Rampole Island refers to the case and the main character's reaction to it.[245]
  • In the early 1930s, Ben Shahn produced a series of works related to the case, notably The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti, owned by the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City.[246] A similar 60-by-12-foot mural by Shahn, executed in marble and enamel, is installed on the east wall of Huntington Beard Crouse Hall at Syracuse University.[247]
  • In F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story, "Six of One..." (1932), one of the characters is said to have been "arrested in the Sacco-Vanzetti demonstrations".[248]
  • The chapter 'Holding the Fort: The Night Sacco and Vanzetti Died' of Frank Moorhouse's 1993 novel Grand Days depicts the violent demonstrations in Geneva following the execution.[249]
  • In 1935, Maxwell Anderson's award-winning drama Winterset presented the story of a man who attempts to clear the name of his Italian immigrant father who has been executed for robbery and murder.[250] It was adapted as a feature film a year later.[251]
  • In 1936, the third novel in John Dos Passos' U.S.A. trilogy, The Big Money, Mary French works on the Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee and is arrested protesting their imminent executions.[252]
  • James T. Farrell's 1946 novel Bernard Clare uses the anti-Italian sentiment provoked by coverage of the case and the crowd scene in New York City's Union Square awaiting news of the executions as critical plot elements.[253]
  • Mark Binelli presented the two as a Laurel-and-Hardy-like comedy team in the 2006 novel Sacco and Vanzetti Must Die![254]
  • The trial is discussed in detail in Kurt Vonnegut's 1979 novel Jailbird, in which Vonnegut suggests that the case—especially Medeiros' confession—is a modern day parallel to the crucifixion of Jesus.[255]
  • Rick Geary wrote a 2011 graphic novel titled The Lives of Sacco & Vanzetti as part of his Treasury of XXth Century Murder series.[256]
  • In the novel Vita Nostra by Marina and Sergey Dyachenko, (Maryna and Serhiy Dyachenko) the Institute for Special Technologies is on Sacco and Vanzetti street.
  • In the novel Paradies Amerika by Egon Erwin Kisch, Sacco and Vanzetti are mentioned as victims of a "barbaric judicial murder".[257]
  • Margo Laurie's 2022 novella The Anarchist's Wife is a fictionalized depiction of the Sacco and Vanzetti case.[258]

Poetry Edit

  • John Dos Passos wrote the poem "They Are Dead Now", about the executions of Sacco and Vanzetti.[259]
  • In his poem "America", Allen Ginsberg presents a catalog of slogans that includes the line: "Sacco and Vanzetti must not die".[260]
  • Carl Sandburg described the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti in his poem "Legal Midnight Hour".[261]
  • Edna St. Vincent Millay wrote a poem after the executions titled "Justice Denied In Massachusetts".[262]
  • William Carlos Williams wrote a poem entitled "Impromptu: The Suckers" in response to the trial.[263]
  • The Welsh poet Alun Lewis, who died in World War II, wrote a poem in the form of a dramatic monologue titled "Sacco Writes to his Son".[264]

See also Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Jornal Folha da Manhã, segunda-feira, 22 de agosto de 1927. ISBN 9781575888057
  2. ^ Frankfurter, Felix (1927). The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti : A Critical Analysis for Lawyers and Laymen. Boston: Little, Brown and Company.
  3. ^ Cannistraro, Philip V.; Tibaldo, Lorenzo (2017). Mussolini e il caso Sacco-Vanzetti (in Italian). Claudiana. ISBN 9788868981204.
  4. ^ Cannistraro, Philip V. (1996). "Mussolini, Sacco-Vanzetti, and the Anarchists: The Transatlantic Context". The Journal of Modern History. 68 (1): 31–62. doi:10.1086/245285. ISSN 0022-2801. JSTOR 2124332. S2CID 143847291.
  5. ^ a b c "Sacco and Vanzetti Put to Death Early This Morning". The New York Times. August 23, 1927. from the original on January 23, 2018. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  6. ^ Douglas Walton (2005). Argumentation Methods for Artificial Intelligence in Law. p. 36. ISBN 9783540278818. from the original on February 16, 2021. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  7. ^ (State), California. California. Supreme Court. Records and Briefs: S014605. p. 29. from the original on February 16, 2021. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  8. ^ Michael A. Musmano (January 1961). The Sacco-Vanzetti Case: A Miscarriage of Justice. Vol. 47. American Bar Association. pp. 29, 30. Retrieved October 3, 2015.
  9. ^ The New York Times, March 5, 1922
  10. ^ Groff, B. (2019) Analysis: Selected prison letters of Nicola Sacco. Salem Press Encyclopedia.
  11. ^ Avrich, Paul (1996). Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background. Princeton University Press. pp. 13, 31. ISBN 9780691026046.
  12. ^ Aiuto, Russell. "The Legacy of Sacco & Vanzetti". truTV. from the original on November 16, 2018. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  13. ^ Avrich, Paul, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background, Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press, ISBN 9780691026046 (1996), p. 134
  14. ^ The New York Times: "Chicago Anarchists Held in Poison Plot", February 14, 1916 July 26, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, accessed July 12, 2010
  15. ^ Avrich, Paul, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background, Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press, ISBN 9780691026046 (1996), p. 98
  16. ^ Anonimi Compagni (Anonymous Fellow Anarchists), Un Trentennio di Attività Anarchica, 1914–1945, Edizioni L'Antistato, Cesena (1953) (reprinted 2002), pp. 195–197
  17. ^ a b "The Sacco-Vanzetti Case (overview)". Upenn.edu. from the original on April 21, 2020. Retrieved September 15, 2008.
  18. ^ a b McCormick, Charles H., Hopeless Cases, The Hunt For The Red Scare Terrorist Bombers, Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America, pp. 60–61. Quote: "Elia claims to have been soundly asleep when Salsedo allegedly climbed out the window a few feet away from him, then silently jumped into eternity. Nor did he hear the agents running into his room to find out what had happened; he was snoring loudly when they entered."
  19. ^ Tejada, Susan, In Search of Sacco and Vanzetti: Double Lives, Troubled Times, and the Massachusetts Murder Case that Shook the World, Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2012; ISBN 9781555537302, p. 117
  20. ^ David Felix, Protest: Sacco-Vanzetti and the Intellectuals, Bloomington: Indiana University Press (1965), pp. 75–76, 80
  21. ^ McCormick, Hopeless Cases, p. 60
  22. ^ "FamilySearch". FamilySearch. from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  23. ^ "FamilySearch". FamilySearch. from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  24. ^ a b "Sacco & Vanzetti: Investigation and arrest". Mass.gov. from the original on March 30, 2020. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Reed, Barry C. (1960). "The Sacco-Vanzetti Case: The Trial of the Century". American Bar Association Journal. 46 (8): 867–869. ISSN 0002-7596. JSTOR 25721262.
  26. ^ Frankfurter, Felix (March 1927). "The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti". The Atlantic. The Atlantic Monthly Group. from the original on May 27, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2015.
  27. ^ Watson, Bruce, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, the Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind, p. 127
  28. ^ a b c Anderson, Terence, Schum, David A., and Twining, William L., Analysis of Evidence, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521673167 (2005), p. 22
  29. ^ Watson, Bruce, p. 127
  30. ^ a b c d e f Avrich, Paul, Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America, AK Press, ISBN 9781904859277 (2005), Interview of Charles Poggi, pp. 132–133
  31. ^ a b c d e Avrich, Paul, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background, ISBN 9780691026046 (1991), pp. 201–202
  32. ^ Young, William, and Kaiser, David E., Postmortem: New Evidence in the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti, University of Massachusetts Press, ISBN 0870234781 (1985), p. 23
  33. ^ a b Avrich (1991), Sacco and Vanzetti, p. 202
  34. ^ Michael A. Musmano (January 1961). The Sacco-Vanzetti Case: A Miscarriage of Justice. Vol. 47. American Bar Association. p. 29. Retrieved October 3, 2015.
  35. ^ Avrich (1991), Sacco and Vanzetti p. 205
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Watson, Bruce, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, the Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind, New York: Viking Press, 2007, ISBN 0670063533, pp. 65–66, 74–76, 116–118
  37. ^ The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti May 27, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. By Felix Frankfurter. The Atlantic, March 1927.
  38. ^ Avrich (1991), Sacco and Vanzetti pp. 205, 213, 227
  39. ^ "Bomb For Herrick Wounds His Valet In His Paris Home", The New York Times, October 19, 1921. Note: Years later, the sender of the bomb was revealed to be May Picqueray, a militant anarchist and editor of Le Réfractaire.
  40. ^ Temkin, Moshik, The Sacco-Vanzetti Affair: America on Trial, New Haven: Yale University Press (2009), ISBN 9780300124842, p. 63
  41. ^ "Judge J. P. Vahe Dies At Plymouth". The Boston Daily Globe. October 3, 1934.
  42. ^ Ehrmann, pp. 73–74
  43. ^ Watson, pp. 59–60; Sacco and Vanzetti, Letters, p. 225n
  44. ^ Ehrmann, p. 460
  45. ^ Young and Kaiser, pp. 21–23
  46. ^ Russell, Resolved, p. 111
  47. ^ Lisa N Sacco (2007). Chermak, Steven; Bailey, Frankie (eds.). Crimes and Trials of the Century. Westport Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 25. ISBN 9780313341106. Retrieved October 3, 2015.
  48. ^ Joughin, pp. 34–38
  49. ^ Joughin, p. 39
  50. ^ Joughin, pp. 42–43, 45–46; Ehrmann, pp. 115ff.
  51. ^ Joughin, pp. 43, 46
  52. ^ Joughin, p. 46
  53. ^ Joughin, pp. 300, 304
  54. ^ a b Ehrmann, pp. 114–115
  55. ^ Joughin, pp. 10, 47
  56. ^ Amerika-Institut: Last Statements (1927), Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti July 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine; accessed June 22, 2010.
  57. ^ a b Joughin, p. 56
  58. ^ Joughin, p. 47
  59. ^ Watson, Bruce, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, the Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind, Viking Press (2007), ISBN 9780670063536, p. 264
  60. ^ Joughin, p. 9
  61. ^ Joughin, pp. 47–48
  62. ^ Ehrmann, p. 151; Sacco and Vanzetti, Letters, p. 225n
  63. ^ Watson, pp. 116–117.
  64. ^ Linder, Doug (2001). "The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti". law2.umkc.edu. Kansas City MO: University of Missouri, Kansas City School of Law. p. 5. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  65. ^ a b Watson, Bruce (2007), Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind, New York: Viking Penguin, ISBN 9780670063536, pp. 103–104
  66. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Commonwealth v. Nicola Sacco & Another: Background for Opinion, Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, 255 Mass. 369; 151 N.E. 839, January 11–13, 1926, Argued; May 12, 1926, Decided
  67. ^ Reed 1960, p. 869.
  68. ^ Ramsland, Katherine. "Ballistics: The Science of Guns". truTV. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  69. ^ Russell, 1962, pp. 158–160
  70. ^ a b c d Grant, Robert, and Katz, Joseph, The Great Trials of the Twenties: The Watershed Decade in America's Courtrooms, New York: Da Capo Press, ISBN 9781885119520 (1998), p. 43
  71. ^ a b Neville, John F., Twentieth-century Cause Cèlébre: Sacco, Vanzetti, and the Press, 1920–1927, Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 9780275977832 (2004), p. 52 (Note: Accents are incorrect in the original title.)
  72. ^ Russell, Francis (June 1962). "Sacco Guilty, Vanzetti Innocent?". American Heritage. 13 (4): 111. About the gun found on Vanzetti there is too much uncertainty to come to any conclusion. Being of .38 caliber, it was obviously not used at Braintree, where all the bullets fired were .32's
  73. ^ Reed 1960, p. 868.
  74. ^ a b c Bortman, Eli, Sacco and Vanzetti (New England Remembers), Applewood Books, ISBN 9781889833767 (2005), p. 40
  75. ^ Watson, Bruce, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, The Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind, p. 126: Upon questioning by the prosecution, witnesses testified that the shop's incorrect labeling of Berardelli's revolver as a .32 instead of a .38 was a common mistake, as there were few outward visible differences between the .32 and 38-caliber Harrington & Richardson five-shot revolvers.
  76. ^ a b Watson, Bruce, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, The Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind, p. 126
  77. ^ Avrich (1991), Sacco and Vanzetti: p. 199: Note: Orciani, who did not testify at trial, was the same person who had helped Mario Buda escape the police trap on May 5, 1920 at the Johnson garage via motorcycle.
  78. ^ Avrich (1991), Sacco and Vanzetti, pp. 158, 189, 202: Both Orciani and Falzini (Falsini), like Sacco and Vanzetti, were Galleanists.
  79. ^ Watson, p. 317
  80. ^ Frankfurter, Felix. "The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti". The Atlantic Monthly. from the original on May 27, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2015.
  81. ^ a b Frankfurter, Felix (March 1, 1927). "The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti". The Atlantic. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  82. ^ Watson, 178, 183–184
  83. ^ Watson, p. 184
  84. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Parr 2009, p. 59.
  85. ^ Sacco, Lisa (2007). "2". In Chermak, Steven; Bailey, Frankie (eds.). Crimes and Trials of the Century. Westport Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780313341106.
  86. ^ Watson, p. 64.; See also: Financial Report of the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee (Century Press, 1925)
  87. ^ The Committee also supported Moore's request for grant money. See Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, The Rebel Girl: An Autobiography, My First Life (1906–1926), revised edition (Masses & Mainstream, 1973), p. 326
  88. ^ Flynn, pp. 330–331
  89. ^ Watson, p. 194.
  90. ^ Watson, p. 265.
  91. ^ Kempton, pp. 42–44
  92. ^ Kempton, pp. 42–44. For a brief biography of Jackson, see Brandeis University: "Jackson, Gardner" July 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, accessed February 15, 2011
  93. ^ Virginia Spencer Carr, Dos Passos: A Life (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1984), p. 222; John Dos Passos, Facing the Chair: Story of Americanization of Two Foreignborn Workmen (Boston: Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee, 1927)
  94. ^ Watson, p. 277.
  95. ^ Sacco and Vanzetti, Letters[page needed]
  96. ^ Joughin, Louis; Morgan, Edmund M. (2015). The Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti. Princeton University Press. pp. 114–115. ISBN 9781400868650. from the original on February 16, 2021. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  97. ^ a b c Evans, Colin, Casebook of Forensic Detection: How Science Solved 100 of the World's Most Baffling Crimes, New York: Penguin Publishers Ltd., ISBN 9780425215593 (2007), pp. 12–23: "Doctor" Hamilton was not actually a doctor, but a former patent medicine salesman. He acquired a self-taught reputation as an expert firearms witness, though his testimony had been called into question as early as 1918, three years after Hamilton had testified in a New York murder case, People v. Stielow, that scratches on the barrel rifling of a revolver claimed to be Stielow's exactly matched marks on the bullet that killed the murder victim. Stielow was convicted and sentenced to death, and was only saved from execution after another man confessed to the murder. Subsequent new forensic examinations of both pistol and bullet demonstrated conclusively that no 'scratches' existed and that Stielow's revolver could not have been the murder weapon, and Stielow received a full pardon from the governor of New York.
  98. ^ People v. Stielow, 160 N.Y.S. 555 (1916)
  99. ^ Joughin, Louis and Morgan, Edmund M., An Unpublished Chapter in the Record: The Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co. (1948)
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  102. ^ a b c d e f g h Ehrmann, p. xvii
  103. ^ Watson, p. 238
  104. ^ Watson, p. 235
  105. ^ Watson, pp. 260–261
  106. ^ Frankfurter, p. 165
  107. ^ Watson, pp. 257–260; Tropp reproduces the original note Medeiros passed to Sacco in prison, Tropp, p. 34; on Medeiros's early life, see Russell, Case Resolved, pp. 127–128
  108. ^ Watson, pp. 265–273; Young and Kaiser, pp. 141ff.
  109. ^ Ehrmann develops the theory at length. He consistently spells the name Medeiros without explanation. Ehrmann, pp. 404–431, and passim
  110. ^ In 1925 Joe Morelli denied any involvement in the Braintree robbery-murders (Watson, pp. 270–271). A 1973 Mafia informant's autobiography quotes his brother Frank Morelli saying of Sacco and Vanzetti: "Those two suckers took it on the chin for us. That shows you how much justice there really is." Young and Kaiser, pp. 151–152 (their dating of the autobiography to 1975 is mistaken); Vincent Teresa, My Life in the Mafia (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1973)
  111. ^ Watson, pp. 266–273, 279
  112. ^ Watson, pp. 273–275, 280
  113. ^ Watson, pp. 280–281
  114. ^ Pulitzer Prizes: "Winners and Finalists: 1927" February 16, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, accessed July 7, 2010
  115. ^ William David Sloan and Laird B. Anderson, eds., Pulitzer Prize Editorials: America's Best Writing, 1917–2003 (Wiley-Blackwell, 2007), 3rd edition, pp. 33–36. Reprinted in Topp, Sacco and Vanzetti Case, pp. 158–160; Frankfurter, Case of Sacco and Vanzetti, pp. 115–118. Available online: Google Books.
  116. ^ Watson, p. 282
  117. ^ Frankfurter, Case of Sacco and Vanzetti, p. 103. The article later was published, slightly expanded, in book form. Chief Justice of the United States William Howard Taft and some others who believed the pair guilty considered Frankfurter's article to be the foundation of most intellectuals' criticism of the Sacco and Vanzetti case. Robert Grant, Fourscore: An Autobiography (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1934), pp. 366–374
  118. ^ a b c d Goddard, Calvin H., Who Did The Shooting?, Popular Science, Vol. 111 No. 5, ISSN 0161-7370 (November 1927), pp. 21–22, 171
  119. ^ Young and Kaiser, p. 106.
  120. ^ a b The New York Times: Louis Stark, "What Seven Years of Legal Struggle Have Developed", April 17, 1927 February 16, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, accessed June 22, 2010
  121. ^ Watson, p. 289
  122. ^ The New York Times: "Judge Thayer Dies in Boston at 75" November 19, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, April 19, 1933. Accessed December 20, 2009
  123. ^ Watson, pp. 277, 294
  124. ^ Watson, p. 331
  125. ^ "Catharine Sargent Huntington". from the original on January 11, 2020. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
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Works cited Edit

  • Parr, James L. (2009). Dedham: Historic and Heroic Tales from Shiretown. Arcadia Publishing Incorporated. ISBN 9781625842770. Retrieved August 15, 2019.

Further reading Edit

  • Paul Avrich, Anarchist Voices: An Oral History of Anarchism in America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996. ISBN 9780691044941.
  • Paul Avrich, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Anarchist Background, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1991. ISBN 9780691026046.
  • Eli Bortman, Sacco & Vanzetti. Boston: Commonwealth Editions, 2005. ISBN 9781889833767.
  • Robert D'Attilio, "La Salute è in Voi: the Anarchist Dimension" in Sacco-Vanzetti: Developments and Reconsiderations – 1979, Conference Proceedings (Boston: Trustees of the Public Library of the City of Boston, 1982). ISBN 9780890730676.
  • Luigi Botta, "Sacco e Vanzetti: giustiziata la verità" (prefazione di Pietro Nenni), Edizioni Gribaudo, Cavallermaggiore, Robert D'Attilio, "La Salute è in Voi: the Anarchist Dimension" in Sacco-Vanzetti: Developments and Reconsiderations, 1978
  • Luigi Botta, "La marcia del dolore – I funerali di Sacco e Vanzetti – Una storia del Novecento", introduzione di Giovanni Vanzetti, contributi di Robert D'Attilio e Jerry Kaplan, contiene DVD del funerale, Nova Delphi Libri, Roma, 2017, ISBN 9788897376569.
  • Luigi Botta, "Sacco & Vanzetti (Cronologia – Strumenti di ricerca)", Edizioni Cristoforo Beggiami, Savigliano, 2017
  • Luigi Botta, "1927–2017 Sacco e Vanzetti", Istituto Storico della Resistenza, Cuneo, 2017
  • Luigi Botta, "Le carte di Vanzetti", Nino Aragno Editore, Torino, 2019, ISBN 9788884199966.
  • Herbert B. Ehrmann, The Case That Will Not Die: Commonwealth vs. Sacco and Vanzetti, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1969. ISBN 9780491000246.
  • Howard Fast, The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti, A New England Legend. New York: Blue Heron Press, 1953. ISBN 9780837155845.
  • David Felix, Protest: Sacco-Vanzetti and the Intellectuals, Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1965.
  • Roberta Strauss Feuerlicht, Justice Crucified, The Story of Sacco and Vanzetti, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1977
  • Felix Frankfurter, "The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti", Atlantic Monthly, March 1927. – Reprinted in book form as The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti: A Critical Analysis for Lawyers and Laymen. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1927.
  • James Grossman, "The Sacco-Vanzetti Case Reconsidered", in Commentary, January 1962
  • Brian Harris, Injustice. Sutton Publishing. 2006.
  • Brian Jackson, The Black Flag: A Look Back at the Strange Case of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981
  • G. Louis Joughin and Edmund M. Morgan, The Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1948.
  • Joseph B. Kadane and David A. Schum, A Probabilistic Analysis of the Sacco and Vanzetti Evidence, Wiley Series in Probability & Mathematical Statistics, 1996
  • Murray Kempton, Part of our Time: Some Monuments and Ruins of the Thirties. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1955.
  • Eugene Lyons The Life and Death of Sacco and Vanzetti. New York: International Publishers, 1927.
  • Eugene Lyons, Assignment in Utopia. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1937.
  • Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruling denying new trial at Case citation 255 Mass. 369, decided May 12, 1926.
  • Robert Montgomery, Sacco-Vanzetti: The Murder and the Myth. New York: Devin-Adair, 1960.
  • Michael Musmanno, After Twelve Years. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1939.
  • John Neville, Twentieth-Century Cause Cèlébre [sic]: Sacco, Vanzetti, and the Press, 1920–1927. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2004.
  • Richard Newby, Kill Now, Talk Forever: Debating Sacco and Vanzetti. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2002.
  • Katherine Anne Porter, The Never-Ending Wrong, Boston: Little, Brown, 1977.
  • Report to the Governor in the Matter of Sacco and Vanzetti, Boston: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1977.
  • Francis Russell, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Case Resolved. New York: Harper & Row, 1986.
  • Francis Russell, Tragedy in Dedham: The Story of the Sacco-Vanzetti Case. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1962.
  • Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti. New York: Octagon Books, 1928.
  • Nicola Sacco, The Sacco-Vanzetti Case. New York: Russell & Russell, 1931.
  • Sacco-Vanzetti: Developments and Reconsiderations – 1979, Conference Proceedings, Boston: Trustees of the Public Library of the City of Boston, 1979.
  • The Sacco-Vanzetti Case: Transcript of the Record of the Trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in the Courts of Massachusetts, 6 vols., New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1928–29
  • Upton Sinclair, Boston: A Documentary Novel of the Sacco-Vanzetti Case, Cambridge: R. Bentley, 1978
  • James E. Starrs, "Once More Unto the Breech: The Firearms Evidence in the Sacco and Vanzetti Case Revisited", Journal of Forensic Sciences (1986), pp. 630–654, 1050–1078.
  • Susan Tejada, In Search of Sacco & Vanzetti: Double Lives, Troubled Times, & the Massachusetts Murder Case that Shook the World. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2012.
  • Moshik Temkin, The Sacco-Vanzetti Affair: America on Trial. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009.
  • Lorenzo Tibaldo, Sotto un cielo stellato. Vita e morte di Nicola Sacco e Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Turin: Claudiana, 2008.
  • Michael M. Topp, The Sacco and Vanzetti Case: A Brief History with Documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2005.
  • Bruce Watson, Sacco and Vanzetti: The Men, the Murders, and the Judgment of Mankind. New York: Viking Press, 2007.
  • Robert P. Weeks, Commonwealth vs. Sacco and Vanzetti. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1958.
  • William Young and David E. Kaiser, Postmortem: New Evidence in the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti, Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1985.

External links Edit

  • The Sacco-Vanzetti case at the Kate Sharpley Library
  • The Sacco and Vanzetti Commemoration Society
  • Sacco and Vanzetti Archive at marxists.org
  • Carol Vanderveer, "American Writers and the Sacco-Vanzetti Case", 2001
  • , "Famous American Trials". – Overview of case by Professor Douglas O. Linder, UMKC School of Law
  • Nicola Sacco at Library of Congress, with 16 library catalog records
  • Bartolomeo Vanzetti at Library of Congress, with 24 library catalog records
  • Sacco-Vanzetti Case Records, 1920–1928 at the Harvard Law School Library, Historical & Special Collections
  • Sacco-Vanzetti Trial newspaper clippings, April–November 1927 at the Harvard Law School Library, Historical & Special Collections
  • Sacco and Vanzetti collections, Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections Department, Brandeis University, Boston, Massachusetts – 4 separate archives: (1) Francis Russell collection 1921–1965, (2) Gardner Jackson Collection 1896–1965, (3) Mrs. Walter Frank Collection, 1927–1963, (4) Tom O'Connor Collection 1920–1965
  • Citizens National Committee for Sacco-Vanzetti/Sacco-Vanzetti National League, Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections Department, Brandeis University, Boston, Massachusetts
  • Frankfurter, Felix. The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti: A Critical Analysis for Lawyers and Laymen at Google Books

sacco, vanzetti, other, uses, disambiguation, nicola, sacco, pronounced, niˈkɔːla, ˈsakko, april, 1891, august, 1927, bartolomeo, vanzetti, pronounced, bartoloˈmɛːo, vanˈtsetti, ˈdzet, june, 1888, august, 1927, were, italian, immigrant, anarchists, were, contr. For other uses see Sacco and Vanzetti disambiguation Nicola Sacco pronounced niˈkɔːla ˈsakko April 22 1891 August 23 1927 and Bartolomeo Vanzetti pronounced bartoloˈmɛːo vanˈtsetti ˈdzet June 11 1888 August 23 1927 were Italian immigrant anarchists who were controversially accused of murdering Alessandro Berardelli and Frederick Parmenter a guard and a paymaster during the April 15 1920 armed robbery of the Slater and Morrill Shoe Company in Braintree Massachusetts United States Seven years later they were executed in the electric chair at Charlestown State Prison Anarchist trial defendants Bartolomeo Vanzetti left and Nicola Sacco right After a few hours deliberation on July 14 1921 the jury convicted Sacco and Vanzetti of first degree murder and they were sentenced to death by the trial judge Anti Italianism anti immigrant and anti anarchist bias were suspected as having heavily influenced the verdict A series of appeals followed funded largely by the private Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee The appeals were based on recanted testimony conflicting ballistics evidence a prejudicial pretrial statement by the jury foreman and a confession by an alleged participant in the robbery All appeals were denied by trial judge Webster Thayer and also later denied by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court By 1926 the case had drawn worldwide attention As details of the trial and the men s suspected innocence became known Sacco and Vanzetti became the center of one of the largest causes celebres in modern history In 1927 protests on their behalf were held in every major city in North America and Europe as well as in Tokyo Sydney Melbourne Sao Paulo Rio de Janeiro Buenos Aires Dubai Montevideo Johannesburg and Auckland 1 Celebrated writers artists and academics pleaded for their pardon or for a new trial Harvard law professor and future Supreme Court justice Felix Frankfurter argued for their innocence in a widely read Atlantic Monthly article that was later published in book form 2 Even the Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini was convinced of their innocence and attempted to pressure American authorities to have them released 3 4 The two were scheduled to die in April 1927 accelerating the outcry Responding to a massive influx of telegrams urging their pardon Massachusetts governor Alvan T Fuller appointed a three man commission to investigate the case After weeks of secret deliberation that included interviews with the judge lawyers and several witnesses the commission upheld the verdict Sacco and Vanzetti were executed in the electric chair just after midnight on August 23 1927 5 Investigations in the aftermath of the executions continued throughout the 1930s and 40s The publication of the men s letters containing eloquent professions of innocence intensified belief in their wrongful execution Additional ballistics tests and incriminating statements by the men s acquaintances have clouded the case On August 23 1977 the 50th anniversary of the executions Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis issued a proclamation that Sacco and Vanzetti had been unfairly tried and convicted and that any disgrace should be forever removed from their names 6 7 Contents 1 Background 2 Robbery 3 Arrests and indictment 4 Trials 4 1 Bridgewater crimes trial 4 2 Braintree crimes trial 4 2 1 Jury 5 Defense committee 6 Motions for a new trial 7 Appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court 8 Medeiros confession 9 Second appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court 10 Protests and advocacy 11 Defendants in prison 12 Sentencing 13 Clemency appeal and the Governor s Advisory Committee 14 Execution and funeral 15 Continuing protests and analyses 16 Massachusetts judicial reform 17 Historical viewpoints 18 Later evidence and investigations 19 Dukakis proclamation 20 Later tributes 21 References in popular culture 21 1 Plays 21 2 Films and television 21 3 Music 21 4 Written works paintings 21 5 Poetry 22 See also 23 Citations 24 Works cited 25 Further reading 26 External linksBackground Edit Sacco and VanzettiSacco was a shoemaker and a night watchman 8 born April 22 1891 in Torremaggiore Province of Foggia Apulia region in Italian Puglia Italy who migrated to the United States at the age of seventeen 9 Before immigrating according to a letter he sent while imprisoned Sacco worked on his father s vineyard often sleeping out in the field at night to prevent animals from destroying the crops 10 Vanzetti was a fishmonger born June 11 1888 in Villafalletto Province of Cuneo Piedmont region Both left Italy for the US in 1908 11 although they did not meet until a 1917 strike 12 The men were believed to be followers of Luigi Galleani an Italian anarchist who advocated revolutionary violence including bombing and assassination Galleani published Cronaca Sovversiva Subversive Chronicle a periodical that advocated violent revolution and a bomb making manual called La Salute e in voi Salvation Is within You At the time Italian anarchists in particular the Galleanist group ranked at the top of the United States government s list of dangerous enemies 13 Since 1914 the Galleanists had been identified as suspects in several violent bombings and assassination attempts including an attempted mass poisoning 14 15 16 Publication of Cronaca Sovversiva was suppressed in July 1918 and the government deported Galleani and eight of his closest associates on June 24 1919 17 Other Galleanists remained active for three years 60 of whom waged an intermittent campaign of violence against US politicians judges and other federal and local officials especially those who had supported deportation of alien radicals Among the dozen or more violent acts was the bombing of Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer s home on June 2 1919 In that incident Carlo Valdinocci a former editor of Cronaca Sovversiva was killed when the bomb intended for Palmer exploded in the editor s hands Radical pamphlets entitled Plain Words signed The Anarchist Fighters were found at the scene of this and several other midnight bombings that night 17 Several Galleanist associates were suspected or interrogated about their roles in the bombing incidents Two days before Sacco and Vanzetti were arrested a Galleanist named Andrea Salsedo fell to his death from the US Justice Department s Bureau of Investigation BOI offices on the 14th floor of 15 Park Row in New York City 18 Salsedo had worked in the Canzani Printshop in Brooklyn to where federal agents traced the Plain Words leaflet 18 Roberto Elia a fellow New York printer and admitted anarchist 19 was later deposed in the inquiry and testified that Salsedo had committed suicide for fear of betraying the others He portrayed himself as the strong one who had resisted the police 20 According to anarchist writer Carlo Tresca Elia changed his story later stating that Federal agents had thrown Salsedo out the window 21 Robbery Edit 38 Harrington amp Richardson top break revolver similar to pistol carried by Berardelli 32 Colt Model 1903 automatic pistol 32 Savage Model 1907 semi automatic pistolThe Slater Morrill Shoe Company factory was located on Pearl Street in Braintree Massachusetts On April 15 1920 two men were robbed and killed while transporting the company s payroll in two large steel boxes to the main factory One of them Alessandro Berardelli 22 23 a security guard was shot four times 24 as he reached for his hip holstered 38 caliber Harrington amp Richardson revolver his gun was not recovered from the scene The other man Frederick Parmenter a paymaster who was unarmed was shot twice 24 once in the chest and a second time fatally in the back as he attempted to flee 25 The robbers seized the payroll boxes and escaped in a stolen dark blue Buick that was carrying several other men 26 As the car was being driven away by Michael Codispoti the robbers fired wildly at company workers nearby 25 A coroner s report and subsequent ballistic investigation revealed that six bullets removed from the murdered men s bodies were of 32 automatic ACP caliber Five of these 32 caliber bullets were all fired from a single semi automatic pistol a 32 caliber Savage Model 1907 which used a particularly narrow grooved barrel rifling with a right hand twist 25 27 Two of the bullets were recovered from Berardelli s body 28 29 Four 32 automatic brass shell casings were found at the murder scene manufactured by one of three firms Peters Winchester or Remington The Winchester cartridge case was of a relatively obsolete cartridge loading which had been discontinued from production some years earlier Two days after the robbery police located the robbers Buick several 12 gauge shotgun shells were found on the ground nearby 25 Arrests and indictment Edit Mario BudaAn earlier attempted robbery of another shoe factory occurred on December 24 1919 in Bridgewater Massachusetts by people identified as Italian who used a car that was seen escaping to Cochesett in West Bridgewater Police speculated that Italian anarchists perpetrated the robberies to finance their activities Bridgewater police chief Michael E Stewart suspected that known Italian anarchist Ferruccio Coacci was involved Stewart discovered that Mario Buda aka Mike Boda lived with Coacci 30 When Chief Stewart later arrived at the Coacci home only Buda was living there and when questioned he said that Coacci owned a 32 Savage automatic pistol which he kept in the kitchen 31 A search of the kitchen did not locate the gun but Stewart found in a kitchen drawer a manufacturer s technical diagram for a Model 1907 of the exact type of 32 caliber pistol used to shoot Parmenter and Berardelli 31 32 Stewart asked Buda if he owned a gun and the man produced a 32 caliber Spanish made automatic pistol 33 Buda told police that he owned a 1914 Overland automobile which was being repaired 31 The car was delivered for repairs four days after the Braintree crimes but it was old and apparently had not been run for five months 34 Tire tracks were seen near the abandoned Buick getaway car and Chief Stewart surmised that two cars had been used in the getaway and that Buda s car might have been the second car 31 When Stewart discovered that Coacci had worked for both shoe factories that had been robbed he returned with the Bridgewater police Mario Buda was not home 31 but on May 5 1920 he arrived at the garage with three other men later identified as Sacco Vanzetti and Riccardo Orciani The four men knew each other well Buda would later refer to Sacco and Vanzetti as the best friends I had in America 35 Sacco and Vanzetti boarded a streetcar but were tracked down and soon arrested When searched by police both denied owning any guns but were found to be holding loaded pistols Sacco was found to have an Italian passport anarchist literature a loaded 32 Colt Model 1903 automatic pistol and twenty three 32 automatic cartridges in his possession several of those bullet cases were of the same obsolescent type as the empty Winchester 32 casing found at the crime scene and others were manufactured by the firms of Peters and Remington much like other casings found at the scene 25 Vanzetti had four 12 gauge shotgun shells 33 and a five shot nickel plated 38 caliber Harrington amp Richardson revolver similar to the 38 carried by Berardelli the slain Braintree guard whose weapon was not found at the scene of the crime 25 When they were questioned the pair denied any connection to anarchists citation needed Orciani was arrested May 6 but gave the alibi that he had been at work on the day of both crimes Sacco had been at work on the day of the Bridgewater crimes but said that he had the day off on April 15 the day of the Braintree crimes and was charged with those murders The self employed Vanzetti had no such alibis and was charged for the attempted robbery and attempted murder in Bridgewater and the robbery and murder in the Braintree crimes 36 Sacco and Vanzetti were charged with the crime of murder on May 5 1920 and indicted four months later on September 14 37 Following Sacco and Vanzetti s indictment for murder for the Braintree robbery Galleanists and anarchists in the United States and abroad began a campaign of violent retaliation Two days later on September 16 1920 Mario Buda allegedly orchestrated the Wall Street bombing where a time delay dynamite bomb packed with heavy iron sash weights in a horse drawn cart exploded killing 38 people and wounding 134 30 38 In 1921 a booby trap bomb mailed to the American ambassador in Paris exploded wounding his valet 39 For the next six years bombs exploded at other American embassies all over the world 40 Trials EditBridgewater crimes trial Edit Rather than accept court appointed counsel Vanzetti chose to be represented by John P Vahey a former foundry superintendent and future state court judge who had been practicing law since 1905 most notably with his brother James H Vahey and his law partner Charles Hiller Innes 41 James Graham who was recommended by supporters also served as defense counsel 36 42 Frederick G Katzmann the Norfolk and Plymouth County District Attorney prosecuted the case 43 The presiding judge was Webster Thayer who was already assigned to the court before this case was scheduled A few weeks earlier he had given a speech to new American citizens decrying Bolshevism and anarchism s threat to American institutions He supported the suppression of functionally violent radical speech and incitement to commit violent acts 36 44 45 46 He was known to dislike foreigners but was considered to be a fair judge 47 The trial began on June 22 1920 The prosecution presented several witnesses who put Vanzetti at the scene of the crime Their descriptions varied especially with respect to the shape and length of Vanzetti s mustache 48 Physical evidence included a shotgun shell retrieved at the scene of the crime and several shells found on Vanzetti when he was arrested 49 The defense produced 16 witnesses all Italians from Plymouth who testified that at the time of the attempted robbery they had bought eels from Vanzetti for Eastertide in accordance with their traditions Such details reinforced the difference between the Italians and the jurors Some testified in imperfect English others through an interpreter whose inability to speak the same dialect of Italian as the witnesses hampered his effectiveness On cross examination the prosecution found it easy to make the witnesses appear confused about dates A boy who testified admitted to rehearsing his testimony You learned it just like a piece at school the prosecutor asked Sure he replied 50 The defense tried to rebut the eyewitnesses with testimony that Vanzetti always wore his mustache in a distinctive long style but the prosecution rebutted this 51 The defense case went badly and Vanzetti did not testify in his own defense 52 During the trial he said that his lawyers had opposed putting him on the stand 36 That same year defense attorney Vahey told the governor that Vanzetti had refused his advice to testify 53 Decades later a lawyer who assisted Vahey in the defense said that the defense attorneys left the choice to Vanzetti but warned him that it would be difficult to prevent the prosecution from using cross examination to challenge the credibility of his character based on his political beliefs He said that Vanzetti chose not to testify after consulting with Sacco 36 Herbert B Ehrmann who later joined the defense team wrote many years later that the dangers of putting Vanzetti on the stand were very real 54 Another legal analysis of the case faulted the defense for not offering more to the jury by letting Vanzetti testify concluding that by his remaining silent it left the jury to decide between the eyewitnesses and the alibi witness without his aid In these circumstances a verdict of not guilty would have been very unusual That analysis claimed that no one could say that the case was closely tried or vigorously fought for the defendant 55 Vanzetti complained during his sentencing on April 9 1927 for the Braintree crimes that Vahey sold me for thirty golden money like Judas sold Jesus Christ 36 He accused Vahey of having conspired with the prosecutor to agitate still more the passion of the juror the prejudice of the juror towards people of our principles against the foreigner against slackers 36 56 On July 1 1920 the jury deliberated for five hours and returned guilty verdicts on both counts armed robbery and first degree murder 36 Before sentencing Judge Thayer learned that during deliberations the jury had tampered with the shotgun shells found on Vanzetti at the time of his arrest to determine if the shot they contained was of sufficient size to kill a man 36 57 Since that prejudiced the jury s verdict on the murder charge Thayer declared that part a mistrial On August 16 1920 he sentenced Vanzetti on the charge of armed robbery to a term of 12 to 15 years in prison the maximum sentence allowed 36 54 57 An assessment by whom of Thayer s conduct of the trial said his stupid rulings as to the admissibility of conversations are about equally divided between the two sides and thus provided no evidence of partiality 58 Sacco and Vanzetti both denounced Thayer Vanzetti wrote I will try to see Thayer death sic before his pronunciation of our sentence and asked fellow anarchists for revenge revenge in our names and the names of our living and dead 59 In 1927 advocates for Sacco and Vanzetti charged that this case was brought first because a conviction for the Bridgewater crimes would help convict him for the Braintree crimes where evidence against him was weak The prosecution countered that the timing was driven by the schedules of different courts that handled the cases 60 The defense raised only minor objections in an appeal that was not accepted 61 A few years later Vahey joined Katzmann s law firm 62 Braintree crimes trial Edit See also History of Dedham Massachusetts 1900 1999 Sacco and Vanzetti Norfolk County Courthouse Dedham Massachusetts site of the second trialSacco and Vanzetti went on trial for their lives on May 21 1921 at Dedham Norfolk County Massachusetts for the Braintree robbery and murders Webster Thayer again presided he had asked to be assigned to the trial Katzmann again prosecuted for the State Vanzetti was represented by brothers Jeremiah and Thomas McAnraney Sacco was represented by Fred H Moore and William J Callahan The choice of Moore a former attorney for the Industrial Workers of the World proved a key mistake for the defense A notorious radical from California Moore quickly enraged Judge Thayer with his courtroom demeanor often doffing his jacket and once his shoes Reporters covering the case were amazed to hear Judge Thayer during a lunch recess proclaim I ll show them that no long haired anarchist from California can run this court and later You wait till I give my charge to the jury I ll show them 63 Throughout the trial Moore and Thayer clashed repeatedly over procedure and decorum citation needed Authorities anticipated a possible bomb attack and had the Dedham courtroom outfitted with heavy sliding steel doors and cast iron shutters that were painted to appear wooden 64 65 Each day during the trial the courthouse was placed under heavy police security and Sacco and Vanzetti were escorted to and from the courtroom by armed guards 65 The Commonwealth relied on evidence that Sacco was absent from his work in a shoe factory on the day of the murders that the defendants were in the neighborhood of the Braintree robbery murder scene on the morning when it occurred being identified as having been there seen separately and also together that the Buick getaway car was also in the neighborhood and that Vanzetti was near and in it that Sacco was seen near the scene of the murders before they occurred and also was seen to shoot Berardelli after Berardelli fell and that that shot caused his death that used shell casings were left at the scene of the murders some of which could have been found to have been discharged from a 32 pistol afterwards found on Sacco that a cap was found at the scene of the murders which witnesses identified as resembling one formerly worn by Sacco and that both men were members of anarchist cells that espoused violence including assassination 66 Among the more important witnesses called by the prosecution was salesman Carlos E Goodridge who stated that as the getaway car raced within twenty five feet of him one of the car s occupants whom he identified as being Sacco pointed a gun in his direction 67 Both defendants offered alibis that were backed by several witnesses Vanzetti testified that he had been selling fish at the time of the Braintree robbery Sacco testified that he had been in Boston applying for a passport at the Italian consulate He stated he had lunched in Boston s North End with several friends each of whom testified on his behalf Prior to the trial Sacco s lawyer Fred Moore went to great lengths to contact the consulate employee whom Sacco said he had talked with on the afternoon of the crime Once contacted in Italy the clerk said he remembered Sacco because of the unusually large passport photo he presented The clerk also remembered the date April 15 1920 but he refused to return to the United States to testify a trip requiring two ship voyages citing his ill health Instead he executed a sworn deposition that was read aloud in court and quickly dismissed citation needed Much of the trial focused on material evidence notably bullets guns and the cap Prosecution witnesses testified that Bullet III the 32 caliber bullet that had fatally wounded Berardelli was from a discontinued Winchester 32 Auto cartridge loading so obsolete that the only bullets similar to it that anyone could locate to make comparisons were those found in the cartridges in Sacco s pockets 68 Prosecutor Frederick Katzmann decided to participate in a forensic bullet examination using bullets test fired from Sacco s 32 Colt Automatic after the defense arranged for such tests Sacco saying he had nothing to hide had allowed his gun to be test fired with experts for both sides present during the trial s second week The prosecution matched bullets fired through the gun to those taken from one of the slain men citation needed In court District Attorney Katzmann called two forensic gun expert witnesses Capt Charles Van Amburgh of Springfield Armory and Capt William Proctor of the Massachusetts State Police who testified that they believed that of the four bullets recovered from Berardelli s body Bullet III the fatal bullet exhibited rifling marks consistent with those found on bullets fired from Sacco s 32 Colt Automatic pistol 28 In rebuttal two defense forensic gun experts testified that Bullet III did not match any of the test bullets from Sacco s Colt 69 After the trial Capt Proctor signed an affidavit stating that he could not positively identify Sacco s 32 Colt as the only pistol that could have fired Bullet III This meant that Bullet III could have been fired from any of the 300 000 32 Colt Automatic pistols then in circulation 70 71 All witnesses to the shooting testified that they saw one gunman shoot Berardelli four times yet the defense never questioned how only one of four bullets found in the deceased guard was identified as being fired from Sacco s Colt 28 Vanzetti was being tried under Massachusetts felony murder rule and the prosecution sought to implicate him in the Braintree robbery by the testimony of several witnesses one testified that he was in the getaway car and others who stated they saw Vanzetti in the vicinity of the Braintree factory around the time of the robbery 25 No direct evidence tied Vanzetti s 38 nickel plated Harrington amp Richardson five shot revolver to the crime scene except for the fact that it was identical in type and appearance to one owned by the slain guard Berardelli which was missing from the crime scene 66 72 All six bullets recovered from the victims were 32 caliber fired from at least two different automatic pistols 73 The prosecution claimed Vanzetti s 38 revolver had originally belonged to the slain Berardelli and that it had been taken from his body during the robbery No one testified to seeing anyone take the gun but Berardelli had an empty holster and no gun on him when he was found 25 Additionally witnesses to the payroll shooting had described Berardelli as reaching for his gun on his hip when he was cut down by pistol fire from the robbers 25 District Attorney Katzmann pointed out that Vanzetti had lied at the time of his arrest when making statements about the 38 revolver found in his possession He claimed that the revolver was his own and that he carried it for self protection yet he incorrectly described it to police as a six shot revolver instead of a five shot 25 Vanzetti also told police that he had purchased only one box of cartridges for the gun all of the same make yet his revolver was loaded with five 38 cartridges of varying brands 25 At the time of his arrest Vanzetti also claimed that he had bought the gun at a store but could not remember which one and that it cost 18 or 19 three times its actual market value 74 He lied about where he had obtained the 38 cartridges found in the revolver 25 The prosecution traced the history of Berardelli s 38 Harrington amp Richardson H amp R revolver Berardelli s wife testified that she and her husband dropped off the gun for repair at the Iver Johnson Co of Boston a few weeks before the murder 66 According to the foreman of the Iver Johnson repair shop Berardelli s revolver was given a repair tag with the number of 94765 and this number was recorded in the repair logbook with the statement H amp R revolver 38 calibre new hammer repairing half an hour 66 However the shop books did not record the gun s serial number and the caliber was apparently incorrectly labeled as 32 instead of 38 caliber 66 75 The shop foreman testified that a new spring and hammer were put into Berardelli s Harrington amp Richardson revolver The gun was claimed and the half hour repair paid for though the date and identity of the claimant were not recorded 66 After examining Vanzetti s 38 revolver the foreman testified that Vanzetti s gun had a new replacement hammer in keeping with the repair performed on Berardelli s revolver 76 The foreman explained that the shop was always kept busy repairing 20 to 30 revolvers per day which made it very hard to remember individual guns or keep reliable records of when they were picked up by their owners 25 But he said that unclaimed guns were sold by Iver Johnson at the end of each year and the shop had no record of an unclaimed gun sale of Berardelli s revolver 76 To reinforce the conclusion that Berardelli had reclaimed his revolver from the repair shop the prosecution called a witness who testified that he had seen Berardelli in possession of a 38 nickel plated revolver the Saturday night before the Braintree robbery 66 After hearing testimony from the repair shop employee that the repair shop had no record of Berardelli picking up the gun the gun was not in the shop nor had it been sold the defense put Vanzetti on the stand where he testified that he had actually bought the gun several months earlier from fellow anarchist Luigi Falzini for five dollars in contradiction to what he had told police upon his arrest 66 74 This was corroborated by Luigi Falzini Falsini a friend of Vanzetti s and a fellow Galleanist who stated that after buying the 38 revolver from one Riccardo Orciani 77 he sold it to Vanzetti 66 74 78 The defense also called two expert witnesses a Mr Burns and a Mr Fitzgerald who each testified that no new spring and hammer had ever been installed in the revolver found in Vanzetti s possession 66 The District Attorney s final piece of material evidence was a flop eared cap claimed to have been Sacco s Sacco tried the cap on in court and according to two newspaper sketch artists who ran cartoons the next day it was too small sitting high on his head But Katzmann insisted the cap fitted Sacco and noting a hole in the back where Sacco had hung the cap on a nail each day continued to refer to it as his and in denying later appeals Judge Thayer often cited the cap as material evidence During the 1927 Lowell Commission investigation however Braintree s Police Chief admitted that he had torn the cap open upon finding it at the crime scene a full day after the murders Doubting the cap was Sacco s the chief told the commission it could not have lain in the street for thirty hours with the State Police the local police and two or three thousand people there 79 Protest for Sacco and Vanzetti in London 1921Controversy clouded the prosecution witnesses who identified Sacco as having been at the scene of the crime One a bookkeeper named Mary Splaine precisely described Sacco as the man she saw firing from the getaway car From Felix Frankfurter s account from The Atlantic Monthly article Viewing the scene from a distance of from sixty to eighty feet she saw a man previously unknown to her in a car traveling at the rate of from fifteen to eighteen miles per hour and she saw him only for a distance of about thirty feet that is to say for from one and a half to three seconds 80 Yet cross examination revealed that Splaine was unable to identify Sacco at the inquest but had recall of great details of Sacco s appearance over a year later While a few others singled out Sacco or Vanzetti as the men they had seen at the scene of the crime far more witnesses both prosecution and defense could not identify them 81 The defendants radical politics may have played a role in the verdict Judge Thayer though a sworn enemy of anarchists warned the defense against bringing anarchism into the trial Yet defense attorney Fred Moore felt he had to call both Sacco and Vanzetti as witnesses to let them explain why they were fully armed when arrested Both men testified that they had been rounding up radical literature when apprehended and that they had feared another government deportation raid Yet both hurt their case with rambling discourses on radical politics that the prosecution mocked The prosecution also brought out that both men had fled the draft by going to Mexico in 1917 81 On July 21 1921 the jury deliberated for three hours broke for dinner and then returned the guilty verdicts Supporters later insisted that Sacco and Vanzetti had been convicted for their anarchist views yet every juror insisted that anarchism had played no part in their decision to convict the two men At that time a first degree murder conviction in Massachusetts was punishable by death Sacco and Vanzetti were bound for the electric chair unless the defense could find new evidence citation needed The verdicts and the likelihood of death sentences immediately roused international opinion Demonstrations were held in 60 Italian cities and a flood of mail was sent to the American embassy in Paris Demonstrations followed in a number of Latin American cities 82 Anatole France veteran of the campaign for Alfred Dreyfus and recipient of the 1921 Nobel Prize for Literature wrote an Appeal to the American People The death of Sacco and Vanzetti will make martyrs of them and cover you with shame You are a great people You ought to be a just people 83 Jury Edit The 12 jurors were sequestered at the courthouse for the entirety of the six week trial 84 They slept on cots in the courthouse s gran jury room and bathed in the basement of the jail 84 To celebrate the 4th of July they were brought to Scituate Massachusetts and given a lobster dinner 84 To get a full jury courthouse officials had to go to extraordinary lengths Over 600 men were interviewed with the most common reason for dismissal being their opposition to the death penalty 84 One man a sugar dealer tried to pretend that he was deaf in an attempt to get out of serving on the jury When he was discovered by answering a question posed by the judge Sacco and Vanzetti were sent into fits of laughter 84 After 500 potential jurors were interviewed but only seven selected deputies from the Norfolk County Sheriff s office went out to workplaces club meetings concerts and elsewhere to bring in additional potential jurors 84 One man ultimately selected was brought from his wedding dinner 84 The Quincy man had to postpone his honeymoon until after the trial 84 Defense committee EditIn 1921 most of the nation had not yet heard of Sacco and Vanzetti Brief mention of the conviction appeared on page three of The New York Times Defense attorney Moore radicalized and politicized the process by discussing Sacco and Vanzetti s anarchist beliefs attempting to suggest that they were prosecuted primarily for their political beliefs and the trial was part of a government plan to stop the anarchist movement in the United States His efforts helped stir up support but were so costly that he was eventually dismissed from the defense team 85 The Sacco Vanzetti Defense Committee was formed on May 9 1920 immediately following the arrests by a group of fellow anarchists headed by Vanzetti s 23 year old friend Aldino Felicani Over the next seven years it raised 300 000 86 Defense attorney Fred Moore drew on its funds for his investigations 87 Differences arose when Moore tried to determine who had committed the Braintree crimes over objections from anarchists that he was doing the government s work After the Committee hired William G Thompson to manage the legal defense he objected to its propaganda efforts 88 A Defense Committee publicist wrote an article about the first trial that was published in The New Republic In the winter of 1920 1921 the Defense Committee sent stories to labor union publications every week It produced pamphlets with titles like Fangs at Labor s Throat sometimes printing thousands of copies It sent speakers to Italian communities in factory towns and mining camps 89 The Committee eventually added staff from outside the anarchist movement notably Mary Donovan who had experience as a labor leader and Sinn Fein organizer 90 In 1927 she and Felicani together recruited Gardner Jackson a Boston Globe reporter from a wealthy family to manage publicity and serve as a mediator between the Committee s anarchists and the growing number of supporters with more liberal political views who included socialites lawyers and intellectuals 91 Jackson bridged the gap between the radicals and the social elite so well that Sacco thanked him a few weeks before his execution We are one heart but unfortunately we represent two different class But whenever the heart of one of the upper class join with the exploited workers for the struggle of the right in the human feeling is the feel of an spontaneous attraction and brotherly love to one another 92 The noted American author John Dos Passos joined the committee and wrote its 127 page official review of the case Facing the Chair Story of Americanization of Two Foreignborn Workmen 93 Dos Passos concluded it barely possible that Sacco might have committed murder as part of a class war but that the soft hearted Vanzetti was clearly innocent Nobody in his right mind who was planning such a crime would take a man like that along Dos Passos wrote of Vanzetti 94 After the executions the Committee continued its work helping to gather material that eventually appeared as The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti 95 Motions for a new trial EditMultiple separate motions for a new trial were denied by Judge Thayer 96 One motion the so called Hamilton Proctor motion involved the forensic ballistic evidence presented by the expert witnesses for the prosecution and defense The prosecution s firearms expert Charles Van Amburgh had re examined the evidence in preparation for the motion By 1923 bullet comparison technology had improved somewhat and Van Amburgh submitted photos of the bullets fired from Sacco s 32 Colt in support of the argument that they matched the bullet that killed Berardelli In response the controversial 97 98 self proclaimed firearms expert for the defense Albert H Hamilton 97 conducted an in court demonstration involving two brand new Colt 32 caliber automatic pistols belonging to Hamilton along with Sacco s 32 Colt of the same make and caliber In front of Judge Thayer and the lawyers for both sides Hamilton disassembled all three pistols and placed the major component parts barrel barrel bushing recoil spring frame slide and magazine into three piles on the table before him 99 100 101 He explained the functions of each part and began to demonstrate how each was interchangeable in the process intermingling the parts of all three pistols 100 Judge Thayer stopped Hamilton and demanded that he reassemble Sacco s pistol with its proper parts 100 Other motions focused on the jury foreman and a prosecution ballistics expert In 1923 the defense filed an affidavit from a friend of the jury foreman who swore that prior to the trial the jury foreman had allegedly said of Sacco and Vanzetti Damn them they ought to hang them anyway That same year the defense read to the court an affidavit by Captain William Proctor who had died shortly after conclusion of the trial in which Proctor stated that he could not say that Bullet III was fired by Sacco s 32 Colt pistol 71 At the conclusion of the appeal hearings Thayer denied all motions for a new trial on October 1 1924 102 Several months later in February 1924 Judge Thayer asked one of the firearms experts for the prosecution Capt Charles Van Amburgh to reinspect Sacco s Colt and determine its condition With District Attorney Katzmann present Van Amburgh took the gun from the clerk and started to take it apart 100 Van Amburgh quickly noticed that the barrel to Sacco s gun was brand new being still covered in the manufacturer s protective rust preventative 100 Judge Thayer began private hearings to determine who had tampered with the evidence by switching the barrel on Sacco s gun During three weeks of hearings Albert Hamilton and Captain Van Amburgh squared off challenging each other s authority Testimony suggested that Sacco s gun had been treated with little care and frequently disassembled for inspection New defense attorney William Thompson insisted that no one on his side could have switched the barrels unless they wanted to run their necks into a noose 103 Albert Hamilton swore he had only taken the gun apart while being watched by Judge Thayer Judge Thayer made no finding as to who had switched the 32 Colt barrels but ordered the rusty barrel returned to Sacco s Colt 100 After the hearing concluded unannounced to Judge Thayer Captain Van Amburgh took both Sacco s and Vanzetti s guns along with the bullets and shells involved in the crime to his home where he kept them until a Boston Globe expose revealed the misappropriation in 1960 Meanwhile Van Amburgh bolstered his own credentials by writing an article on the case for True Detective Mysteries The 1935 article charged that prior to the discovery of the gun barrel switch Albert Hamilton had tried to walk out of the courtroom with Sacco s gun but was stopped by Judge Thayer Although several historians of the case including Francis Russell have reported this story as factual nowhere in transcripts of the private hearing on the gun barrel switch was this incident ever mentioned The same year the True Detective article was published a study of ballistics in the case concluded what might have been almost indubitable evidence was in fact rendered more than useless by the bungling of the experts 104 Appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court EditThe defense appealed Thayer s denial of their motions to the Supreme Judicial Court SJC the highest level of the state s judicial system Both sides presented arguments to its five judges on January 11 13 1926 102 The SJC returned a unanimous ruling on May 12 1926 upholding Judge Thayer s decisions 102 105 The Court did not have the authority to review the trial record as a whole or to judge the fairness of the case Instead the judges considered only whether Thayer had abused his discretion in the course of the trial Thayer later claimed that the SJC had approved the verdicts which advocates for the defendants protested as a misinterpretation of the Court s ruling which only found no error in his individual rulings 106 Medeiros confession EditIn November 1925 Celestino Medeiros an ex convict awaiting trial for murder confessed to committing the Braintree crimes He absolved Sacco and Vanzetti of participation 107 In May once the SJC had denied their appeal and Medeiros was convicted the defense investigated the details of Medeiros story Police interviews led them to the Morelli gang based in Providence Rhode Island They developed an alternative theory of the crime based on the gang s history of shoe factory robberies connections to a car like that used in Braintree and other details Gang leader Joe Morelli bore a striking resemblance to Sacco 108 109 110 The defense filed a motion for a new trial based on the Medeiros confession on May 26 1926 102 In support of their motion they included 64 affidavits The prosecution countered with 26 affidavits 111 When Thayer heard arguments from September 13 to 17 1926 102 the defense along with their Medeiros Morelli theory of the crime charged that the U S Justice Department was aiding the prosecution by withholding information obtained in its own investigation of the case Attorney William Thompson made an explicitly political attack A government which has come to value its own secrets more than it does the lives of its citizens has become a tyranny whether you call it a republic a monarchy or anything else 112 Judge Thayer denied this motion for a new trial on October 23 1926 After arguing against the credibility of Medeiros he addressed the defense claims against the federal government saying the defense was suffering from a new type of disease a belief in the existence of something which in fact and truth has no such existence 102 113 Three days later the Boston Herald responded to Thayer s decision by reversing its longstanding position and calling for a new trial Its editorial We Submit earned its author a Pulitzer Prize 114 115 No other newspapers followed suit 116 Second appeal to the Supreme Judicial Court EditThe defense promptly appealed again to the Supreme Judicial Court and presented their arguments on January 27 and 28 1927 102 While the appeal was under consideration Harvard law professor and future Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter published an article in the Atlantic Monthly arguing for a retrial He noted that the SJC had already taken a very narrow view of its authority when considering the first appeal and called upon the court to review the entire record of the case He called their attention to Thayer s lengthy statement that accompanied his denial of the Medeiros appeal describing it as a farrago of misquotations misrepresentations suppressions and mutilations that were honeycombed with demonstrable errors 117 At the same time Major Calvin Goddard was a ballistics expert who had helped pioneer the use of the comparison microscope in forensic ballistic research He offered to conduct an independent examination of the gun and bullet forensic evidence by using techniques that he had developed for use with the comparison microscope 118 Goddard first offered to conduct a new forensic examination for the defense which rejected it and then to the prosecution which accepted his offer 118 Using the comparison microscope Goddard compared Bullet III and a 32 Auto shell casing found at the Braintree shooting with that of several 32 Auto test cartridges fired from Sacco s 32 Colt automatic pistol 70 118 Goddard concluded that not only did Bullet III match the rifling marks found on the barrel of Sacco s 32 Colt pistol but that scratches made by the firing pin of Sacco s 32 Colt on the primers of spent shell casings test fired from Sacco s Colt matched those found on the primer of a spent shell casing recovered at the Braintree murder scene 70 118 More sophisticated comparative examinations in 1935 1961 and 1983 each reconfirmed the opinion that the bullet the prosecution said killed Berardelli and one of the cartridge cases introduced into evidence were fired in Sacco s 32 Colt automatic 70 However in his book on new evidence in the Sacco and Vanzetti case historian David E Kaiser wrote that Bullet III and its shell casing as presented had been substituted by the prosecution and were not genuinely from the scene 119 The Supreme Judicial Court denied the Medeiros appeal on April 5 1927 102 Summarizing the decision The New York Times said that the SJC had determined that the judge had a right to rule as he did but that the SJC did not deny the validity of the new evidence 120 The SJC also said It is not imperative that a new trial be granted even though evidence is newly discovered and if presented to a jury would justify a different verdict 121 Protests and advocacy EditIn 1924 referring to his denial of motions for a new trial Judge Thayer confronted a Massachusetts lawyer Did you see what I did with those anarchistic bastards the other day the judge said I guess that will hold them for a while Let them go and see now what they can get out of the Supreme Court The outburst remained a secret until 1927 when its release fueled the arguments of Sacco and Vanzetti s defenders The New York World attacked Thayer as an agitated little man looking for publicity and utterly impervious to the ethical standards one has the right to expect of a man presiding in a capital case 122 Many socialists and intellectuals campaigned for a retrial without success John Dos Passos came to Boston to cover the case as a journalist stayed to author a pamphlet called Facing the Chair 123 and was arrested in a demonstration on August 10 1927 along with writer Dorothy Parker trade union organizer and Socialist Party leader Powers Hapgood and activist Catharine Sargent Huntington 124 125 After being arrested while picketing the State House the poet Edna St Vincent Millay pleaded her case to the governor in person and then wrote an appeal I cry to you with a million voices answer our doubt There is need in Massachusetts of a great man tonight 126 Others who wrote to Fuller or signed petitions included Albert Einstein George Bernard Shaw and H G Wells 127 The president of the American Federation of Labor cited the long period of time intervening between the commission of the crime and the final decision of the Court as well as the mental and physical anguish which Sacco and Vanzetti must have undergone during the past seven years in a telegram to the governor 128 Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini the target of two anarchist assassination attempts quietly made inquiries through diplomatic channels and was prepared to ask Governor Fuller to commute the sentences if it appeared his request would be granted 129 130 In 1926 a bomb presumed to be the work of anarchists destroyed the house of Samuel Johnson the brother of Simon Johnson and garage owner that called police the night of Sacco and Vanzetti s arrest 131 In August 1927 the Industrial Workers of the World IWW called for a three day nationwide walkout to protest the pending executions 132 The most notable response came in the Walsenburg coal district of Colorado where 1 132 out of 1 167 miners participated in the walkout It led to the Colorado coal strike of 1927 133 Defendants in prison Edit Charlestown State Prison 1900For their part Sacco and Vanzetti seemed to alternate between moods of defiance vengeance resignation and despair The June 1926 issue of Protesta Umana published by their Defense Committee carried an article signed by Sacco and Vanzetti that appealed for retaliation by their colleagues In the article Vanzetti wrote I will try to see Thayer death sic before his pronunciation of our sentence and asked fellow anarchists for revenge revenge in our names and the names of our living and dead 134 The article made a reference to La Salute e in voi the title of Galleani s bomb making manual The Sacco Vanzetti Defense Committee newspaper relays a message from Sacco and Vanzetti La Salute e in voi Both wrote dozens of letters asserting their innocence insisting they had been framed because they were anarchists Their conduct in prison consistently impressed guards and wardens In 1927 the Dedham jail chaplain wrote to the head of an investigatory commission that he had seen no evidence of guilt or remorse on Sacco s part Vanzetti impressed fellow prisoners at Charlestown State Prison as a bookish intellectual incapable of committing any violent crime Novelist John Dos Passos who visited both men in jail observed of Vanzetti nobody in his right mind who was planning such a crime would take a man like that along 135 Vanzetti developed his command of English to such a degree that journalist Murray Kempton later described him as the greatest writer of English in our century to learn his craft do his work and die all in the space of seven years 136 During the trial Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis who was then in Washington invited Sacco s wife to stay at his home near the courthouse 84 137 84 Sacco s seven year old son Dante would sometimes stand on the sidewalk outside the jail and play catch with his father by throwing a ball over the wall 84 Sentencing EditOn April 9 1927 Judge Thayer heard final statements from Sacco and Vanzetti In a lengthy speech Vanzetti said 138 139 I would not wish to a dog or to a snake to the most low and misfortunate creature of the earth I would not wish to any of them what I have had to suffer for things that I am not guilty of But my conviction is that I have suffered for things that I am guilty of I am suffering because I am a radical and indeed I am a radical I have suffered because I am an Italian and indeed I am an Italian if you could execute me two times and if I could be reborn two other times I would live again to do what I have done already 140 Thayer declared that the responsibility for the conviction rested solely with the jury s determination of guilt The Court has absolutely nothing to do with that question He sentenced each of them to suffer the punishment of death by the passage of a current of electricity through your body during the week beginning July 10 138 He twice postponed the execution date while the governor considered requests for clemency 141 On May 10 a package bomb addressed to Governor Fuller was intercepted in the Boston post office 142 Clemency appeal and the Governor s Advisory Committee Edit Massachusetts Governor Alvan T FullerIn response to public protests that greeted the sentencing Massachusetts Governor Alvan T Fuller faced last minute appeals to grant clemency to Sacco and Vanzetti On June 1 1927 he appointed an Advisory Committee of three President Abbott Lawrence Lowell of Harvard President Samuel Wesley Stratton of MIT and Probate Judge Robert Grant They were presented with the task of reviewing the trial to determine whether it had been fair Lowell s appointment was generally well received for though he had controversy in his past he had also at times demonstrated an independent streak The defense attorneys considered resigning when they determined that the Committee was biased against the defendants but some of the defendants most prominent supporters including Harvard Law Professor Felix Frankfurter and Judge Julian W Mack of the U S Circuit Court of Appeals persuaded them to stay because Lowell was not entirely hopeless 143 One of the defense attorneys though ultimately very critical of the Committee s work thought the Committee members were not really capable of the task the Governor set for them No member of the Committee had the essential sophistication that comes with experience in the trial of criminal cases The high positions in the community held by the members of the Committee obscured the fact that they were not really qualified to perform the difficult task assigned to them 144 He also thought that the Committee particularly Lowell imagined it could use its fresh and more powerful analytical abilities to outperform the efforts of those who had worked on the case for years even finding evidence of guilt that professional prosecutors had discarded 144 Grant was another establishment figure a probate court judge from 1893 to 1923 and an Overseer of Harvard University from 1896 to 1921 and the author of a dozen popular novels 145 Some criticized Grant s appointment to the Committee with one defense lawyer saying he had a black tie class concept of life around him but Harold Laski in a conversation at the time found him moderate Others cited evidence of xenophobia in some of his novels references to riff raff and a variety of racial slurs His biographer allows that he was not a good choice not a legal scholar and handicapped by age Stratton the one member who was not a Boston Brahmin maintained the lowest public profile of the three and hardly spoke during its hearings 146 In their earlier appeals the defense was limited to the trial record The Governor s Committee however was not a judicial proceeding so Judge Thayer s comments outside the courtroom could be used to demonstrate his bias Once Thayer told reporters that No long haired anarchist from California can run this court 147 According to the affidavits of eyewitnesses Thayer also lectured members of his clubs calling Sacco and Vanzetti Bolsheviki and saying he would get them good and proper During the Dedham trial s first week Thayer said to reporters Did you ever see a case in which so many leaflets and circulars have been spread saying people couldn t get a fair trial in Massachusetts You wait till I give my charge to the jury I ll show them 148 In 1924 Thayer confronted a Massachusetts lawyer at Dartmouth his alma mater and said Did you see what I did with those anarchistic bastards the other day I guess that will hold them for a while Let them go to the Supreme Court now and see what they can get out of them 149 The Committee knew that following the verdict Boston Globe reporter Frank Sibley who had covered the trial wrote a protest to the Massachusetts attorney general condemning Thayer s blatant bias Thayer s behavior both inside the courtroom and outside of it had become a public issue with the New York World attacking Thayer as an agitated little man looking for publicity and utterly impervious to the ethical standards one has the right to expect of a man presiding in a capital case 150 On July 12 13 1927 following testimony by the defense firearms expert Albert H Hamilton before the Committee the Assistant District Attorney for Massachusetts Dudley P Ranney took the opportunity to cross examine Hamilton He submitted affidavits questioning Hamilton s credentials as well as his performance during the New York trial of Charles Stielow in which Hamilton s testimony linking rifling marks to a bullet used to kill the victim nearly sent an innocent man to the electric chair 97 151 The Committee also heard from Braintree s police chief who told them he had found the cap on Pearl Street allegedly dropped by Sacco during the crime a full 24 hours after the getaway car had fled the scene The chief doubted the cap belonged to Sacco and called the whole trial a contest to see who could tell the biggest lies 152 After two weeks of hearing witnesses and reviewing evidence the Committee determined that the trial had been fair and a new trial was not warranted They assessed the charges against Thayer as well Their criticism using words provided by Judge Grant 153 was direct He ought not to have talked about the case off the bench and doing so was a grave breach of judicial decorum But they also found some of the charges about his statements unbelievable or exaggerated and they determined that anything he might have said had no impact on the trial The panel s reading of the trial transcript convinced them that Thayer tried to be scrupulously fair The Committee also reported that the trial jurors were almost unanimous in praising Thayer s conduct of the trial 154 A defense attorney later noted ruefully that the release of the Committee s report abruptly stilled the burgeoning doubts among the leaders of opinion in New England 155 Supporters of the convicted men denounced the Committee Harold Laski told Holmes that the Committee s work showed that Lowell s loyalty to his class transcended his ideas of logic and justice 156 The Sacco e Vanzetti monument in Carrara Defense attorneys William G Thompson and Herbert B Ehrmann stepped down from the case in August 1927 and were replaced by Arthur D Hill 157 Execution and funeral EditThe executions were scheduled for midnight between August 22 and 23 1927 On August 15 a bomb exploded at the home of one of the Dedham jurors 158 On Sunday August 21 more than 20 000 protesters assembled on Boston Common 159 Sacco and Vanzetti awaited execution in their cells at Charlestown State Prison and both men refused a priest several times on their last day as they were atheists 160 161 Their attorney William Thompson asked Vanzetti to make a statement opposing violent retaliation for his death and they discussed forgiving one s enemies 162 Thompson also asked Vanzetti to swear to his and Sacco s innocence one last time and Vanzetti did Celestino Medeiros whose execution had been delayed in case his testimony was required at another trial of Sacco and Vanzetti was executed first Sacco was next and walked quietly to the electric chair then shouted Farewell mother 5 163 Vanzetti in his final moments shook hands with guards and thanked them for their kind treatment read a statement proclaiming his innocence and finally said I wish to forgive some people for what they are now doing to me 5 164 Following the executions death masks were made of the men 165 Violent demonstrations swept through many cities the next day including Geneva London Paris Amsterdam and Tokyo In South America wildcat strikes closed factories Three died in Germany and protesters in Johannesburg burned an American flag outside the American embassy 166 It has been alleged that some of these activities were organized by the Communist Party 167 At Langone Funeral Home in Boston s North End more than 10 000 mourners viewed Sacco and Vanzetti in open caskets over two days At the funeral parlor a wreath over the caskets announced In attesa l ora della vendetta Awaiting the hour of vengeance On Sunday August 28 a two hour funeral procession bearing huge floral tributes moved through the city Thousands of marchers took part in the procession and over 200 000 came out to watch 168 Police blocked the route which passed the State House and at one point mourners and the police clashed The hearses reached Forest Hills Cemetery where after a brief eulogy the bodies were cremated 169 The Boston Globe called it one of the most tremendous funerals of modern times 170 Will H Hays head of the motion picture industry s umbrella organization ordered all film of the funeral procession destroyed 171 Sacco s ashes were sent to Torremaggiore the town of his birth where they are interred at the base of a monument erected in 1998 Vanzetti s ashes were buried with his mother in Villafalletto 172 Continuing protests and analyses EditSee also 1927 1928 Colorado Coal Strike Italian anarchist Severino Di Giovanni one of the most vocal supporters of Sacco and Vanzetti in Argentina bombed the American embassy in Buenos Aires a few hours after the two men were sentenced to death 173 A few days after the executions Sacco s widow thanked Di Giovanni by letter for his support and added that the director of the tobacco firm Combinados had offered to produce a cigarette brand named Sacco amp Vanzetti 173 On November 26 1927 Di Giovanni and others bombed a Combinados tobacco shop 173 On December 24 1927 Di Giovanni blew up the headquarters of The National City Bank of New York and of the Bank of Boston in Buenos Aires in apparent protest of the execution 173 In December 1928 Di Giovanni and others failed in an attempt to bomb the train in which President elect Herbert Hoover was traveling during his visit to Argentina 173 Three months later bombs exploded in the New York City Subway in a Philadelphia church and at the home of the mayor of Baltimore The house of one of the jurors in the Dedham trial was bombed throwing him and his family from their beds On May 18 1928 a bomb destroyed the front porch of the home of executioner Robert Elliott 174 As late as 1932 Judge Thayer s home was wrecked and his wife and housekeeper were injured in a bomb blast 175 Afterward Thayer lived permanently at his club in Boston guarded 24 hours a day until his death on April 18 1933 In October 1927 H G Wells wrote an essay that discussed the case at length He called it a case like the Dreyfus case by which the soul of a people is tested and displayed He felt that Americans failed to understand what about the case roused European opinion 176 The guilt or innocence of these two Italians is not the issue that has excited the opinion of the world Possibly they were actual murderers and still more possibly they knew more than they would admit about the crime Europe is not retrying Sacco and Vanzetti or anything of the sort It is saying what it thinks of Judge Thayer Executing political opponents as political opponents after the fashion of Mussolini and Moscow we can understand or bandits as bandits but this business of trying and executing murderers as Reds or Reds as murderers seems to be a new and very frightening line for the courts of a State in the most powerful and civilized Union on earth to pursue He used the case to complain that Americans were too sensitive to foreign criticism One can scarcely let a sentence that is not highly flattering glance across the Atlantic without some American blowing up 176 In 1928 Upton Sinclair published his novel Boston an indictment of the American judicial system He explored Vanzetti s life and writings as its focus and mixed fictional characters with historical participants in the trials Though his portrait of Vanzetti was entirely sympathetic Sinclair disappointed advocates for the defense by failing to absolve Sacco and Vanzetti of the crimes however much he argued that their trial had been unjust 177 Years later he explained Some of the things I told displeased the fanatical believers but having portrayed the aristocrats as they were I had to do the same thing for the anarchists 178 179 While doing research for the book Sinclair was told confidentially by Sacco and Vanzetti s former lawyer Fred H Moore that the two were guilty and that he Moore had supplied them with fake alibis Sinclair was inclined to believe that that was indeed the case and later referred to this as an ethical problem but he did not include the information about the conversation with Moore in his book 180 181 When the letters Sacco and Vanzetti wrote appeared in print in 1928 journalist Walter Lippmann commented If Sacco and Vanzetti were professional bandits then historians and biographers who attempt to deduce character from personal documents might as well shut up shop By every test that I know of for judging character these are the letters of innocent men 182 On January 3 1929 as Gov Fuller left the inauguration of his successor he found a copy of the Letters thrust at him by someone in the crowd He knocked it to the ground with an exclamation of contempt 183 Intellectual and literary supporters of Sacco and Vanzetti continued to speak out In 1936 on the day when Harvard celebrated its 300th anniversary 28 Harvard alumni issued a statement attacking the University s retired President Lowell for his role on the Governor s Advisory Committee in 1927 They included Heywood Broun Malcolm Cowley Granville Hicks and John Dos Passos 184 Massachusetts judicial reform EditFollowing the SJC s assertion that it could not order a new trial even if there was new evidence that would justify a different verdict a movement for drastic reform quickly took shape in Boston s legal community 120 In December 1927 four months after the executions the Massachusetts Judicial Council cited the Sacco and Vanzetti case as evidence of serious defects in our methods of administering justice It proposed a series of changes designed to appeal to both sides of the political divide including restrictions on the number and timing of appeals Its principal proposal addressed the SJC s right to review It argued that a judge would benefit from a full review of a trial and that no one man should bear the burden in a capital case A review could defend a judge whose decisions were challenged and make it less likely that a governor would be drawn into a case It asked for the SJC to have right to order a new trial upon any ground if the interests of justice appear to inquire it 185 Governor Fuller endorsed the proposal in his January 1928 annual message 186 The Judicial Council repeated its recommendations in 1937 and 1938 Finally in 1939 the language it had proposed was adopted Since that time the SJC has been required to review all death penalty cases to consider the entire case record and to affirm or overturn the verdict on the law and on the evidence or for any other reason that justice may require Mass General Laws 1939 ch 341 187 188 189 Historical viewpoints EditMany historians especially legal historians have concluded the Sacco and Vanzetti prosecution trial and aftermath constituted a blatant disregard for political civil liberties and especially criticize Thayer s decision to deny a retrial John W Johnson has said that the authorities and jurors were influenced by strong anti Italian prejudice and the prejudice against immigrants widely held at the time especially in New England 190 Against charges of racism and racial prejudice Paul Avrich and Brenda and James Lutz point out that both men were known anarchist members of a militant organization members of which had been conducting a violent campaign of bombing and attempted assassinations acts condemned by most Americans of all backgrounds 191 192 Though in general anarchist groups did not finance their militant activities through bank robberies a fact noted by the investigators of the Bureau of Investigation this was not true of the Galleanist group Mario Buda readily told an interviewer Andavamo a prenderli dove c erano We used to go and get it money where it was meaning factories and banks 30 The guard Berardelli was also Italian Johnson and Avrich suggest that the government prosecuted Sacco and Vanzetti for the robbery murders as a convenient means to put a stop to their militant activities as Galleanists whose bombing campaign at the time posed a lethal threat both to the government and to many Americans 190 193 Faced with a secretive underground group whose members resisted interrogation and believed in their cause Federal and local officials using conventional law enforcement tactics had been repeatedly stymied in their efforts to identify all members of the group or to collect enough evidence for a prosecution 192 Most historians believe that Sacco and Vanzetti were involved at some level in the Galleanist bombing campaign although their precise roles have not been determined 30 194 In 1955 Charles Poggi a longtime anarchist and American citizen traveled to Savignano in the Emilia Romagna region of Italy to visit old comrades including the Galleanists principal bombmaker Mario Mike Buda 30 While discussing the Braintree robbery Buda told Poggi Sacco c era Sacco was there 30 Poggi added that he had a strong feeling that Buda himself was one of the robbers though I didn t ask him and he didn t say 195 Whether Buda and Ferruccio Coacci whose shared rental house contained the manufacturer s diagram of a 32 Savage automatic pistol matching the 32 Savage pistol believed to have been used to shoot both Berardelli and Parmenter had also participated in the Braintree robbery and murders would remain a matter of speculation 196 Later evidence and investigations EditIn 1941 anarchist leader Carlo Tresca a member of the Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee told Max Eastman Sacco was guilty but Vanzetti was innocent 197 although it is clear from his statement that Tresca equated guilt only with the act of pulling the trigger i e Vanzetti was not the principal triggerman in Tresca s view but was an accomplice to Sacco This conception of innocence is in sharp contrast to the legal one 198 Both The Nation and The New Republic refused to publish Tresca s revelation which Eastman said occurred after he pressed Tresca for the truth about the two men s involvement in the shooting 197 The story finally appeared in National Review in October 1961 199 Others who had known Tresca confirmed that he had made similar statements to them 199 but Tresca s daughter insisted her father never hinted at Sacco s guilt Others attributed Tresca s revelations to his disagreements with the Galleanists 200 Labor organizer Anthony Ramuglia an anarchist in the 1920s said in 1952 that a Boston anarchist group had asked him to be a false alibi witness for Sacco After agreeing he had remembered that he had been in jail on the day in question so he could not testify 201 Both Sacco and Vanzetti had previously fled to Mexico changing their names in order to evade draft registration a fact the prosecutor in their murder trial used to demonstrate their lack of patriotism and which they were not allowed to rebut Sacco and Vanzetti s supporters would later argue that the men fled the country to avoid persecution and conscription their critics said they left to escape detection and arrest for militant and seditious activities in the United States However a 1953 Italian history of anarchism written by anonymous colleagues revealed a different motivation Several dozen Italian anarchists left the United States for Mexico Some have suggested they did so because of cowardice Nothing could be more false The idea to go to Mexico arose in the minds of several comrades who were alarmed by the idea that remaining in the United States they would be forcibly restrained from leaving for Europe where the revolution that had burst out in Russia that February promised to spread all over the continent 202 In October 1961 ballistic tests were run with improved technology on Sacco s Colt semi automatic pistol The results confirmed that the bullet that killed Berardelli in 1920 was fired from Sacco s pistol 203 The Thayer court s habit of mistakenly referring to Sacco s 32 Colt pistol as well as any other automatic pistol as a revolver a common custom of the day has sometimes mystified later generation researchers attempting to follow the forensic evidence trail 66 In 1987 Charlie Whipple a former Boston Globe editorial page editor revealed a conversation that he had with Sergeant Edward J Seibolt in 1937 According to Whipple Seibolt said that we switched the murder weapon in that case but indicated that he would deny this if Whipple ever printed it 204 205 However at the time of the Sacco and Vanzetti trial Seibolt was only a patrolman and did not work in the Boston Police ballistics department Seibolt died in 1961 without corroborating Whipple s story 204 In 1935 Captain Charles Van Amburgh a key ballistics witness for the prosecution wrote a six part article on the case for a pulp detective magazine Van Amburgh described a scene in which Thayer caught defense ballistics expert Hamilton trying to leave the courtroom with Sacco s gun However Thayer said nothing about such a move during the hearing on the gun barrel switch and refused to blame either side Following the private hearing on the gun barrel switch Van Amburgh kept Sacco s gun in his house where it remained until the Boston Globe did an expose in 1960 206 In 1973 a former mobster published a confession by Frank Butsy Morelli Joe s brother We whacked them out we killed those guys in the robbery Butsy Morelli told Vincent Teresa These two greaseballs Sacco and Vanzetti took it on the chin 207 Before his death in June 1982 Giovanni Gambera a member of the four person team of anarchist leaders who met shortly after the arrest of Sacco and Vanzetti to plan their defense told his son that everyone in the anarchist inner circle knew that Sacco was guilty and that Vanzetti was innocent as far as the actual participation in killing 208 Months before he died the distinguished jurist Charles E Wyzanski Jr who had presided for 45 years on the U S District Court in Massachusetts wrote to Russell stating I myself am persuaded by your writings that Sacco was guilty The judge s assessment was significant because he was one of Felix Frankfurter s Hot Dogs and Justice Frankfurter had advocated his appointment to the federal bench 209 The Los Angeles Times published an article on December 24 2005 Sinclair Letter Turns Out to Be Another Expose which references a newly discovered letter from Upton Sinclair to attorney John Beardsley in which Sinclair a socialist writer famous for his muckraking novels revealed a conversation with Fred Moore attorney for Sacco and Vanzetti In that conversation in response to Sinclair s request for the truth Moore stated that both Sacco and Vanzetti were in fact guilty and that Moore had fabricated their alibis in an attempt to avoid a guilty verdict The Los Angeles Times interprets subsequent letters as indicating that to avoid loss of sales to his radical readership particularly abroad and due to fears for his own safety Sinclair didn t change the premise of his novel in that respect 210 However Sinclair also expressed in those letters doubts as to whether Moore deserved to be trusted in the first place and he did not actually assert the innocence of the two in the novel focusing instead on the argument that the trial they got was not fair 211 Dukakis proclamation EditIn 1977 as the 50th anniversary of the executions approached Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis asked the Office of the Governor s Legal Counsel to report on whether there are substantial grounds for believing at least in the light of the legal standards of today that Sacco and Vanzetti were unfairly convicted and executed and to recommend appropriate action 212 The resulting Report to the Governor in the Matter of Sacco and Vanzetti detailed grounds for doubting that the trial was conducted fairly in the first instance and argued as well that such doubts were only reinforced by later discovered or later disclosed evidence 213 The report questioned prejudicial cross examination that the trial judge allowed the judge s hostility the fragmentary nature of the evidence and eyewitness testimony that came to light after the trial It found the judge s charge to the jury troubling for the way it emphasized the defendants behavior at the time of their arrest and highlighted certain physical evidence that was later called into question 214 The report also dismissed the argument that the trial had been subject to judicial review noting that the system for reviewing murder cases at the time failed to provide the safeguards now present 215 Based on recommendations of the Office of Legal Counsel Dukakis declared August 23 1977 the 50th anniversary of their execution as Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti Memorial Day 216 His proclamation issued in English and Italian stated that Sacco and Vanzetti had been unfairly tried and convicted and that any disgrace should be forever removed from their names He did not pardon them because that would imply they were guilty Neither did he assert their innocence 217 218 219 A resolution to censure Dukakis failed in the Massachusetts Senate by a vote of 23 to 12 220 Dukakis later expressed regret only for not reaching out to the families of the victims of the crime 221 Later tributes Edit Memorial poster French Ave and Pearl St Braintree Massachusetts Memorial to the victims French Ave and Pearl St Braintree Massachusetts A monument to the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti outside the Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham Massachusetts A memorial committee tried to present a plaster cast executed in 1937 by Gutzon Borglum the sculptor of Mount Rushmore to Massachusetts governors and Boston mayors in 1937 1947 and 1957 without success On August 23 1997 on the 70th anniversary of the Sacco and Vanzetti executions Boston s first Italian American Mayor Thomas Menino and the Italian American Governor of Massachusetts Paul Cellucci unveiled the work at the Boston Public Library where it remains on display The city s acceptance of this piece of artwork is not intended to reopen debate about the guilt or innocence of Sacco and Vanzetti Menino said It is intended to remind us of the dangers of miscarried justice and the right we all have to a fair trial 222 The event occasioned a renewed debate about the fairness of the trial in the editorial pages of the Boston Herald 223 A mosaic mural portraying the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti is installed on the main campus of Syracuse University In Braintree Massachusetts on the corner of French Avenue and Pearl Street a memorial marks the site of the murders The memorial has two exhibits The first is a weatherproof poster that discusses the crime and the subsequent trial The second exhibit is a metal plaque that memorializes the victims of the crime The Sacco and Vanzetti Centuria was an American anarchist military unit in the Durruti Column that fought in the Spanish Civil War 224 Many sites in the former USSR are named after Sacco and Vanzetti for example a beer production facility in Moscow 225 a kolkhoz in Donetsk region Ukraine and a street and an apartment complex in Yekaterinburg 226 Sacco and Vanzetti was also a popular brand of Russian pencil from 1930 2007 Numerous towns in Italy have streets named after Sacco and Vanzetti including Via Sacco Vanzetti in Torremaggiore Sacco s home town and Villafalletto Vanzetti s 227 In Bakhmut Raion in Eastern Ukraine there is a small village called Sakko i Vantsetti named after them and it was occupied by Russian forces from Feb to mid May 2023 during the Battle of Bakhmut In 2017 as part of an Eagle Scout project a plaque was placed outside of Norfolk Superior Court commemorating the trial 228 References in popular culture EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sacco and Vanzetti news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1940s Russian pencil showing the Sacco amp Vanzetti name in Cyrillic letteringPlays Edit James Thurber and Elliot Nugent s 1940 play The Male Animal turns on a college professor s insistence on reading Vanzetti s statement at sentencing to his English composition class 229 It was adapted as a film the next year starring Henry Fonda and Olivia de Havilland In 1992 Argentinian playwright Mauricio Kartun premiered Sacco y Vanzetti dramaturgia sumario de documentos sobre el caso under the direction of Jaime Kogan In 1999 People s Light amp Theatre Company in Malvern Pennsylvania premiered Louis Lippa s play Sacco and Vanzetti A Vaudeville Directed by co founder Ken Marini it featured long time company members Tom Teti and Stephen Novelli It subsequently received productions at City Theatre of Pittsburgh the Marin Theatre Company San Francisco and the Gorilla Theatre of Tampa Bay citation needed In 2000 the play Voices on the Wind by Eric Paul Erickson centers around the final hours of the lives of Sacco and Vanzetti Former Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis recorded an audio clip of his public statement on the 50th anniversary for the production 230 In 2001 Anton Coppola premiered his opera Sacco and Vanzetti 231 In 2014 Joseph Silovsky wrote and performed in an Off Broadway play about Sacco and Vanzetti Send for the Million Men 232 Films and television Edit Sacco Vanzetti Story was presented on television in 1960 The two part drama starred Martin Balsam as Sacco and Steven Hill as Vanzetti 233 In 1965 the BBC produced The Good Shoemaker and the Poor Fish Peddler a TV movie about the case 234 Sacco amp Vanzetti a 1971 film by Italian director Giuliano Montaldo covers the case and stars Riccardo Cucciolla and Gian Maria Volonte as Sacco and Vanzetti 235 Joan Baez performed the song Here s To You music by Ennio Morricone lyrics by Baez for the film This same song was later used in the 2014 video game Metal Gear Solid V Ground Zeroes In the 1972 comedy film Avanti an American in Italy played by Jack Lemmon frustratedly asks Is this Italian justice and gets the response What about Sacco and Vanzetti The 2006 documentary Sacco and Vanzetti was directed by Peter Miller 236 Produced by Peter Miller and Editor Amy Linton the film presents interviews with researchers and historians of the lives of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti and their trial It also presents forensic evidence that refutes that used by the prosecution during the trial Prison letters written by the defendants are read by voice actors with Tony Shalhoub as Sacco and John Turturro as Vanzetti 237 Interviewees include Howard Zinn Studs Terkel and Arlo Guthrie Sacco and Vanzetti were briefly mentioned in season 1 episode 8 of The Sopranos with Tony Soprano s son Anthony Jr mistaking them for the Antichrist until being corrected that the word he was thinking of was anarchist Sacco and Vanzetti were briefly mentioned in season 4 episode 4 of The Marvelous Mrs Maisel when Asher mentions to Abe they had great lawyers too and must ve been a great comfort to them as they sat in their electric chairs listening to their brains melt Music Edit In 1932 composer Ruth Crawford Seeger wrote the song Sacco Vanzetti on commission from the Society of Contemporary Music in Philadelphia 238 American folk singer Woody Guthrie recorded a series of songs in 1946 1947 known as the Ballads of Sacco amp Vanzetti eventually released in 1960 In 1963 Pulitzer Prize winning American composer Roger Reynolds set selections of Vanzetti s letters to music in the chamber work Portrait of Vanzetti for narrator mixed ensemble and electronics 239 American composer Marc Blitzstein started an opera about Sacco and Vanzetti which was unfinished at the time of his death in 1964 Leonard Lehrman completed the work Sacco and Vanzetti which premiered in 2001 240 The 1971 song Here s to You by Joan Baez and Ennio Morricone is a tribute to them and became a symbol for the human rights movement of the 1970s Georges Moustaki adapted the song under the new title of Marche de Sacco et Vanzetti for his 1971 album Il y avait un jardin There was a garden 241 242 In 1976 the German folk group Manderley included the song Sacco s Brief Sacco s Letter on their album Fliegt Gedanken fliegt 243 American folk singer Charles King wrote the song Two Good Arms about Sacco and Vanzetti in 1977 on the 50th anniversary of their death The song has been performed by Holly Near and Ronnie Gilbert The song Facing the Chair about Sacco amp Vanzetti composed by Andy Irvine was recorded by Patrick Street for their 1988 album No 2 Patrick Street Bruce Molsky recorded the song on his 2022 CD Everywhere You Go Written works paintings Edit Mosaic The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti by Ben Shahn at Syracuse University 1967 Mosaic detail of Sacco and Vanzetti lying dead in their coffins by Ben ShahnUpton Sinclair s 1928 book Boston is a fictional interpretation of the affair 244 H G Wells s 1928 book Mr Blettsworthy on Rampole Island refers to the case and the main character s reaction to it 245 In the early 1930s Ben Shahn produced a series of works related to the case notably The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti owned by the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City 246 A similar 60 by 12 foot mural by Shahn executed in marble and enamel is installed on the east wall of Huntington Beard Crouse Hall at Syracuse University 247 In F Scott Fitzgerald s short story Six of One 1932 one of the characters is said to have been arrested in the Sacco Vanzetti demonstrations 248 The chapter Holding the Fort The Night Sacco and Vanzetti Died of Frank Moorhouse s 1993 novel Grand Days depicts the violent demonstrations in Geneva following the execution 249 In 1935 Maxwell Anderson s award winning drama Winterset presented the story of a man who attempts to clear the name of his Italian immigrant father who has been executed for robbery and murder 250 It was adapted as a feature film a year later 251 In 1936 the third novel in John Dos Passos U S A trilogy The Big Money Mary French works on the Sacco and Vanzetti Defense Committee and is arrested protesting their imminent executions 252 James T Farrell s 1946 novel Bernard Clare uses the anti Italian sentiment provoked by coverage of the case and the crowd scene in New York City s Union Square awaiting news of the executions as critical plot elements 253 Mark Binelli presented the two as a Laurel and Hardy like comedy team in the 2006 novel Sacco and Vanzetti Must Die 254 The trial is discussed in detail in Kurt Vonnegut s 1979 novel Jailbird in which Vonnegut suggests that the case especially Medeiros confession is a modern day parallel to the crucifixion of Jesus 255 Rick Geary wrote a 2011 graphic novel titled The Lives of Sacco amp Vanzetti as part of his Treasury of XXth Century Murder series 256 In the novel Vita Nostra by Marina and Sergey Dyachenko Maryna and Serhiy Dyachenko the Institute for Special Technologies is on Sacco and Vanzetti street In the novel Paradies Amerika by Egon Erwin Kisch Sacco and Vanzetti are mentioned as victims of a barbaric judicial murder 257 Margo Laurie s 2022 novella The Anarchist s Wife is a fictionalized depiction of the Sacco and Vanzetti case 258 Poetry Edit John Dos Passos wrote the poem They Are Dead Now about the executions of Sacco and Vanzetti 259 In his poem America Allen Ginsberg presents a catalog of slogans that includes the line Sacco and Vanzetti must not die 260 Carl Sandburg described the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti in his poem Legal Midnight Hour 261 Edna St Vincent Millay wrote a poem after the executions titled Justice Denied In Massachusetts 262 William Carlos Williams wrote a poem entitled Impromptu The Suckers in response to the trial 263 The Welsh poet Alun Lewis who died in World War II wrote a poem in the form of a dramatic monologue titled Sacco Writes to his Son 264 See also Edit Biography portal Edward Holton JamesCitations Edit Jornal Folha da Manha segunda feira 22 de agosto de 1927 ISBN 9781575888057 Frankfurter Felix 1927 The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti A Critical Analysis for Lawyers and Laymen Boston Little Brown and Company Cannistraro Philip V Tibaldo Lorenzo 2017 Mussolini e il caso Sacco Vanzetti in Italian Claudiana ISBN 9788868981204 Cannistraro Philip V 1996 Mussolini Sacco Vanzetti and the Anarchists The Transatlantic Context The Journal of Modern History 68 1 31 62 doi 10 1086 245285 ISSN 0022 2801 JSTOR 2124332 S2CID 143847291 a b c Sacco and Vanzetti Put to Death Early This Morning The New York Times August 23 1927 Archived from the original on January 23 2018 Retrieved July 9 2010 Douglas Walton 2005 Argumentation Methods for Artificial Intelligence in Law p 36 ISBN 9783540278818 Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved February 16 2021 State California California Supreme Court Records and Briefs S014605 p 29 Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved February 16 2021 Michael A Musmano January 1961 The Sacco Vanzetti Case A Miscarriage of Justice Vol 47 American Bar Association pp 29 30 Retrieved October 3 2015 The New York Times March 5 1922 Groff B 2019 Analysis Selected prison letters of Nicola Sacco Salem Press Encyclopedia Avrich Paul 1996 Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background Princeton University Press pp 13 31 ISBN 9780691026046 Aiuto Russell The Legacy of Sacco amp Vanzetti truTV Archived from the original on November 16 2018 Retrieved July 9 2010 Avrich Paul Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691026046 1996 p 134 The New York Times Chicago Anarchists Held in Poison Plot February 14 1916 Archived July 26 2018 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 12 2010 Avrich Paul Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691026046 1996 p 98 Anonimi Compagni Anonymous Fellow Anarchists Un Trentennio di Attivita Anarchica 1914 1945 Edizioni L Antistato Cesena 1953 reprinted 2002 pp 195 197 a b The Sacco Vanzetti Case overview Upenn edu Archived from the original on April 21 2020 Retrieved September 15 2008 a b McCormick Charles H Hopeless Cases The Hunt For The Red Scare Terrorist Bombers Lanham Maryland University Press of America pp 60 61 Quote Elia claims to have been soundly asleep when Salsedo allegedly climbed out the window a few feet away from him then silently jumped into eternity Nor did he hear the agents running into his room to find out what had happened he was snoring loudly when they entered Tejada Susan In Search of Sacco and Vanzetti Double Lives Troubled Times and the Massachusetts Murder Case that Shook the World Boston Northeastern University Press 2012 ISBN 9781555537302 p 117 David Felix Protest Sacco Vanzetti and the Intellectuals Bloomington Indiana University Press 1965 pp 75 76 80 McCormick Hopeless Cases p 60 FamilySearch FamilySearch Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved February 16 2021 FamilySearch FamilySearch Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved February 16 2021 a b Sacco amp Vanzetti Investigation and arrest Mass gov Archived from the original on March 30 2020 Retrieved February 16 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Reed Barry C 1960 The Sacco Vanzetti Case The Trial of the Century American Bar Association Journal 46 8 867 869 ISSN 0002 7596 JSTOR 25721262 Frankfurter Felix March 1927 The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti The Atlantic The Atlantic Monthly Group Archived from the original on May 27 2020 Retrieved October 2 2015 Watson Bruce Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind p 127 a b c Anderson Terence Schum David A and Twining William L Analysis of Evidence 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521673167 2005 p 22 Watson Bruce p 127 a b c d e f Avrich Paul Anarchist Voices An Oral History of Anarchism in America AK Press ISBN 9781904859277 2005 Interview of Charles Poggi pp 132 133 a b c d e Avrich Paul Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background ISBN 9780691026046 1991 pp 201 202 Young William and Kaiser David E Postmortem New Evidence in the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 0870234781 1985 p 23 a b Avrich 1991 Sacco and Vanzetti p 202 Michael A Musmano January 1961 The Sacco Vanzetti Case A Miscarriage of Justice Vol 47 American Bar Association p 29 Retrieved October 3 2015 Avrich 1991 Sacco and Vanzetti p 205 a b c d e f g h i j Watson Bruce Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind New York Viking Press 2007 ISBN 0670063533 pp 65 66 74 76 116 118 The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti Archived May 27 2020 at the Wayback Machine By Felix Frankfurter The Atlantic March 1927 Avrich 1991 Sacco and Vanzetti pp 205 213 227 Bomb For Herrick Wounds His Valet In His Paris Home The New York Times October 19 1921 Note Years later the sender of the bomb was revealed to be May Picqueray a militant anarchist and editor of Le Refractaire Temkin Moshik The Sacco Vanzetti Affair America on Trial New Haven Yale University Press 2009 ISBN 9780300124842 p 63 Judge J P Vahe Dies At Plymouth The Boston Daily Globe October 3 1934 Ehrmann pp 73 74 Watson pp 59 60 Sacco and Vanzetti Letters p 225n Ehrmann p 460 Young and Kaiser pp 21 23 Russell Resolved p 111 Lisa N Sacco 2007 Chermak Steven Bailey Frankie eds Crimes and Trials of the Century Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 25 ISBN 9780313341106 Retrieved October 3 2015 Joughin pp 34 38 Joughin p 39 Joughin pp 42 43 45 46 Ehrmann pp 115ff Joughin pp 43 46 Joughin p 46 Joughin pp 300 304 a b Ehrmann pp 114 115 Joughin pp 10 47 Amerika Institut Last Statements 1927 Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 22 2010 a b Joughin p 56 Joughin p 47 Watson Bruce Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind Viking Press 2007 ISBN 9780670063536 p 264 Joughin p 9 Joughin pp 47 48 Ehrmann p 151 Sacco and Vanzetti Letters p 225n Watson pp 116 117 Linder Doug 2001 The Trial of Sacco and Vanzetti law2 umkc edu Kansas City MO University of Missouri Kansas City School of Law p 5 Retrieved November 10 2022 a b Watson Bruce 2007 Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind New York Viking Penguin ISBN 9780670063536 pp 103 104 a b c d e f g h i j k Commonwealth v Nicola Sacco amp Another Background for Opinion Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts 255 Mass 369 151 N E 839 January 11 13 1926 Argued May 12 1926 Decided Reed 1960 p 869 Ramsland Katherine Ballistics The Science of Guns truTV Retrieved July 9 2010 Russell 1962 pp 158 160 a b c d Grant Robert and Katz Joseph The Great Trials of the Twenties The Watershed Decade in America s Courtrooms New York Da Capo Press ISBN 9781885119520 1998 p 43 a b Neville John F Twentieth century Cause Celebre Sacco Vanzetti and the Press 1920 1927 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275977832 2004 p 52 Note Accents are incorrect in the original title Russell Francis June 1962 Sacco Guilty Vanzetti Innocent American Heritage 13 4 111 About the gun found on Vanzetti there is too much uncertainty to come to any conclusion Being of 38 caliber it was obviously not used at Braintree where all the bullets fired were 32 s Reed 1960 p 868 a b c Bortman Eli Sacco and Vanzetti New England Remembers Applewood Books ISBN 9781889833767 2005 p 40 Watson Bruce Sacco and Vanzetti The Men The Murders and the Judgment of Mankind p 126 Upon questioning by the prosecution witnesses testified that the shop s incorrect labeling of Berardelli s revolver as a 32 instead of a 38 was a common mistake as there were few outward visible differences between the 32 and 38 caliber Harrington amp Richardson five shot revolvers a b Watson Bruce Sacco and Vanzetti The Men The Murders and the Judgment of Mankind p 126 Avrich 1991 Sacco and Vanzetti p 199 Note Orciani who did not testify at trial was the same person who had helped Mario Buda escape the police trap on May 5 1920 at the Johnson garage via motorcycle Avrich 1991 Sacco and Vanzetti pp 158 189 202 Both Orciani and Falzini Falsini like Sacco and Vanzetti were Galleanists Watson p 317 Frankfurter Felix The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti The Atlantic Monthly Archived from the original on May 27 2020 Retrieved October 2 2015 a b Frankfurter Felix March 1 1927 The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti The Atlantic Retrieved March 8 2021 Watson 178 183 184 Watson p 184 a b c d e f g h i j k Parr 2009 p 59 Sacco Lisa 2007 2 In Chermak Steven Bailey Frankie eds Crimes and Trials of the Century Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 30 ISBN 9780313341106 Watson p 64 See also Financial Report of the Sacco Vanzetti Defense Committee Century Press 1925 The Committee also supported Moore s request for grant money See Elizabeth Gurley Flynn The Rebel Girl An Autobiography My First Life 1906 1926 revised edition Masses amp Mainstream 1973 p 326 Flynn pp 330 331 Watson p 194 Watson p 265 Kempton pp 42 44 Kempton pp 42 44 For a brief biography of Jackson see Brandeis University Jackson Gardner Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed February 15 2011 Virginia Spencer Carr Dos Passos A Life Evanston IL Northwestern University Press 1984 p 222 John Dos Passos Facing the Chair Story of Americanization of Two Foreignborn Workmen Boston Sacco Vanzetti Defense Committee 1927 Watson p 277 Sacco and Vanzetti Letters page needed Joughin Louis Morgan Edmund M 2015 The Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti Princeton University Press pp 114 115 ISBN 9781400868650 Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved February 16 2021 a b c Evans Colin Casebook of Forensic Detection How Science Solved 100 of the World s Most Baffling Crimes New York Penguin Publishers Ltd ISBN 9780425215593 2007 pp 12 23 Doctor Hamilton was not actually a doctor but a former patent medicine salesman He acquired a self taught reputation as an expert firearms witness though his testimony had been called into question as early as 1918 three years after Hamilton had testified in a New York murder case People v Stielow that scratches on the barrel rifling of a revolver claimed to be Stielow s exactly matched marks on the bullet that killed the murder victim Stielow was convicted and sentenced to death and was only saved from execution after another man confessed to the murder Subsequent new forensic examinations of both pistol and bullet demonstrated conclusively that no scratches existed and that Stielow s revolver could not have been the murder weapon and Stielow received a full pardon from the governor of New York People v Stielow 160 N Y S 555 1916 Joughin Louis and Morgan Edmund M An Unpublished Chapter in the Record The Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1948 a b c d e f Fisher Jim Firearms Identification in the Sacco Vanzetti Case Archived June 25 2020 at the Wayback Machine retrieved October 11 2011 Russell Francis Sacco amp Vanzetti The Case Resolved New York Harper amp Row Publishers Inc ISBN 9780060155247 1986 p 150 a b c d e f g h Ehrmann p xvii Watson p 238 Watson p 235 Watson pp 260 261 Frankfurter p 165 Watson pp 257 260 Tropp reproduces the original note Medeiros passed to Sacco in prison Tropp p 34 on Medeiros s early life see Russell Case Resolved pp 127 128 Watson pp 265 273 Young and Kaiser pp 141ff Ehrmann develops the theory at length He consistently spells the name Medeiros without explanation Ehrmann pp 404 431 and passim In 1925 Joe Morelli denied any involvement in the Braintree robbery murders Watson pp 270 271 A 1973 Mafia informant s autobiography quotes his brother Frank Morelli saying of Sacco and Vanzetti Those two suckers took it on the chin for us That shows you how much justice there really is Young and Kaiser pp 151 152 their dating of the autobiography to 1975 is mistaken Vincent Teresa My Life in the Mafia Garden City NY Doubleday 1973 Watson pp 266 273 279 Watson pp 273 275 280 Watson pp 280 281 Pulitzer Prizes Winners and Finalists 1927 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 7 2010 William David Sloan and Laird B Anderson eds Pulitzer Prize Editorials America s Best Writing 1917 2003 Wiley Blackwell 2007 3rd edition pp 33 36 Reprinted in Topp Sacco and Vanzetti Case pp 158 160 Frankfurter Case of Sacco and Vanzetti pp 115 118 Available online Google Books Watson p 282 Frankfurter Case of Sacco and Vanzetti p 103 The article later was published slightly expanded in book form Chief Justice of the United States William Howard Taft and some others who believed the pair guilty considered Frankfurter s article to be the foundation of most intellectuals criticism of the Sacco and Vanzetti case Robert Grant Fourscore An Autobiography Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 1934 pp 366 374 a b c d Goddard Calvin H Who Did The Shooting Popular Science Vol 111 No 5 ISSN 0161 7370 November 1927 pp 21 22 171 Young and Kaiser p 106 a b The New York Times Louis Stark What Seven Years of Legal Struggle Have Developed April 17 1927 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 22 2010 Watson p 289 The New York Times Judge Thayer Dies in Boston at 75 Archived November 19 2018 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times April 19 1933 Accessed December 20 2009 Watson pp 277 294 Watson p 331 Catharine Sargent Huntington Archived from the original on January 11 2020 Retrieved February 16 2021 Watson p 345 Watson p 294 The New York Times Green Begs Fuller to Extend Clemency to Sacco August 9 1927 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 24 2010 Philip Cannistraro Mussolini Sacco Vanzetti and the Anarchists The Transatlantic Context Journal of Modern History vol 68 No 1 March 1996 pp 31 62 Italy had deported one of his attackers Violet Gibson to Great Britain Tropp p 171 Mussolini s telegram to the Italian consul in Boston July 23 1927 Watson p 271 Donald J McClurg The Colorado Coal Strike of 1927 Tactical Leadership of the IWW Labor History vol 4 no 1 Winter 1963 p 71 Donald J McClurg The Colorado Coal Strike of 1927 Tactical Leadership of the IWW Labor History Vol 4 No 1 Winter 1963 p 72 See also Charles J Bayard The 1927 1928 Colorado Coal Strike Pacific Historical Review vol 32 no 3 August 1963 pp 237 238 Watson Bruce Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind NY Viking Press 2007 ISBN 9780670063536 p 264 Watson p 277 Kempton p 46 Hana Janjigian Heald 2005 Prominent Supreme Court Justice was a Dedham Resident Dedham Historical Society Newsletter November Archived from the original on December 31 2006 a b Ehrmann p 458 Ehrmann provides the full record on the court s one hour sentencing session pp 450 458 For Vanzetti s complete statement to the court from which this quotation is excerpted see Last Statement of Bartolomeo Vanzetti 1929 Archived from the original on March 14 2014 Retrieved August 24 2013 Watson pp 308 333 Watson pp 303 304 Herbert B Ehrmann The Case That Will Not Die Commonwealth vs Sacco and Vanzetti Boston Little Brown and Company 1969 p 485 a b Ehrmann pp 255 256 375 512 525ff The New York Times Ex Judge Grant Boston Novelist May 20 1940 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 20 2009 Bruce Watson Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind NY Viking 2007 pp 311 313 Watson p 115 Watson p 116 Watson p 252 The New York Times Judge Thayer Dies in Boston at 75 April 19 1933 Archived November 19 2018 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 20 2009 Newby Richard Kill Now Talk Forever Debating Sacco and Vanzetti AuthorHouse Publishers ISBN 9781420843934 2006 p 594 Watson p 317 Robert Grant Fourscore An Autobiography Boston Houghton Mifflin Company 1934 p 372 The New York Times Advisers Hold Guilt Shown Aug 7 1927 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 20 2009 Later Grant allowed that he was amazed and incensed at the biased comments Judge Thayer made outside the courtroom Ehrmann p 539 Steel Ronald 1980 Walter Lippmann and the American Century Boston Little Brown p 229 ISBN 9781412841153 Supreme Court May Get Sacco Vanzetti Case The Boston Daily Globe August 5 1927 Watson p 334 Watson p 339 Watson pp 341 342 344 Sacco and Vanzetti Murderers or martyrs The Washington Times August 24 2007 Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved October 6 2014 As anarchists both were militant atheists to the point of refusing to be consoled by a priest in their final hours Watson p 343 Watson pp 345 346 Watson p 346 Brandeis University Sacco and Vanzetti collections Mrs Walter Frank Collection 1927 1963 Archived July 19 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed February 15 2011 Watson p 347 Bortman p 60 An East German scholar researching in the Soviet Union archives in 1958 discovered that the Communist Party had instigated these spontaneous demonstrations 200 000 See Huge Parade Forced Used to Drive Back Line of Sacco Vanzetti Marchers at Forest Hills The Boston Globe August 29 1927 permanent dead link Watson pp 348 350 Watson p 349 Young and Kaiser p 6 Watson pp 350 371 372 a b c d e Felipe Pigna Los Mitos de la historia argentina ed Planeta 2006 chapter IV Expropriando al Capital esp 105 114 Greencastle Herald 18 May 1928 Hoosier State Chronicles Indiana s Digital Historic Newspaper Program Newspapers library in gov Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved February 16 2021 The New York Times Bomb Menaces Life of Sacco Case Judge September 27 1932 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 20 2009 a b The New York Times Wells Speaks Some Plain Words to us Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine October 16 1927 accessed February 2 2011 For some continuing controversy over Sinclair s politics in this work see the charges made in Los Angeles Times Jean O Pasco Sinclair Letter Turns Out to Be Another Expose December 24 2005 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 6 2010 for the rebuttal see Greg Mitchell Sliming a Famous Muckraker The Untold Story Editor amp Publisher January 30 2006 available online as History News Network Roundup Talking About History Archived June 15 2017 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 6 2010 Upton Sinclair The Autobiography of Upton Sinclair NY Harcourt Brace amp World Inc 1962 p 242 Leon Harris Upton Sinclair American Rebel NY Thomas Y Crowell Company 1975 pp 243 251 Sacco and Vanzetti Guilty After All Npr org Archived from the original on April 7 2020 Retrieved February 16 2021 Upton Sinclair s 1929 letter to John Beardsley August 29 1929 via Internet Archive Marion Denman Frankfurter and Gardner Jackson eds The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti NY Vanguard Press 1929 p xi The New York Times Fuller Spurns Book of Sacco Letters January 4 1929 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 28 2010 Watson p 352 Garner Jackson a longtime supporter of the defense presented the volume which carried an inscription warning the Governor that he would always be watched and paying tribute to its authors as victims not of the laws but of men Bruce Watson Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind NY Viking 2007 pp 311 315 325 327 356 The New York Times Lowell s Papers on Sacco and Vanzetti Are Released Feb 1 1978 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 28 2009 New York Times Assail Dr Lowell on Sacco Decision Sept 19 1936 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed December 28 2009 The New York Times F Lauriston Bullard Proposed Reforms Echo of Sacco Case December 11 1927 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 22 2010 Note Bullard had written the Boston Herald s Pulitzer Prize winning editorial earlier in the year The Times explained that the Judicial Council was a body established by law in 1924 to recommend legal changes It included lawyers and judges named by governor including a judge or former judge of the SJC The New York Times Fuller Urges Change in Criminal Appeals January 5 1928 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 22 2010 Joughin p 537 Caspar Willard Weinberger Review of Joughin and Morgan Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti in Stanford Law Review v 1 1949 pp 573 578 USA Today Denise Lavoie Sacco Vanzetti case exhibited in Boston September 23 2007 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed August 5 2006 a b Johnson John W Historic U S Court Cases Routledge Press ISBN 0415930197 2001 pp 62 65 Avrich 1996 Sacco and Vanzetti pp 57 150 152 a b Lutz Brenda J and Lutz James M Terrorism in America New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781403974600 2007 pp 78 83 Avrich 1996 Sacco and Vanzetti p 211 Avrich 1996 Sacco and Vanzetti pp 197 205 Avrich Paul Anarchist Voices pp 132 133 Quote Buda also told me that Sacco took part in the Braintree hold up Sacco was there Sacco c era he said I remember it distinctly I felt sure he was telling the truth I didn t ask him who else was involved but he didn t mention Vanzetti and I assumed that he was not Pernicone Nunzio Carlo Tresca Portrait of a Rebel Oakland CA AK Press ISBN 9781849350037 2010 p 118 a b Newby Richard Kill Now Talk Forever Debating Sacco and Vanzetti Bloomington AuthorHouse 2010 p 572 Singer amp LaFond Criminal Law Aspen 1987 a b Russell Francis Sacco and Vanzetti The Case Resolved New York HarperCollins ISBN 9780060155247 1986 pp 25 27 Watson p 362 Russell Resolved pp 109 110 225 226 Russell publicized Ramuglia s story in 1986 Anon Un Trentennio di Attivita Anarchica 1914 1945 Thirty Years of Anarchist Activities ed L Antistato Cesena Italy 1953 Russell Francis June 1962 Sacco Guilty Vanzetti Innocent American Heritage 13 4 110 Making independent examinations Jury and Weller both concluded that the bullet marked III was fired in Sacco s pistol and in no other a b Whipple Charles L A Reporter Illuminates Shady Evidence in Sacco Vanzetti Testimony Nieman Reports Northwestern University Vol 43 Winter 1987 Thomas Jack A Story of Trickery Told Much Too Late Boston Globe January 7 1988 Watson p 247 Vincent Teresa My Life in the Mafia Garden City NY Doubleday 1973 pp 44 46 The son reported this to Francis Russell in November 1982 who made it public in 1986 Francis Russell Clinching the Case in New York Review of Books March 13 1986 Newby Richard Judge Wyzanski Makes History Sacco and Vanzetti Reconvicted Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine Writing University of Pennsylvania August 29 1999 accessed July 31 2008 Sinclair Letter Turns Out to Be Another Expose Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times accessed January 20 2015 Greg Mitchell Sliming a Famous Muckraker The Untold Story Archived June 15 2017 at the Wayback Machine editorandpublisher com accessed January 30 2006 Report to the Governor in the Matter of Sacco and Vanzetti July 13 1977 in Upton Sinclair Boston A Documentary Novel Cambridge MA Robert Bentley Inc 1978 pp 757 790 quote p 757 Report to the Governor 1977 p 761 Report to the Governor 1977 pp 761 769 Report to the Governor 1977 pp 768 773 Proclamation by the Governor 1977 pp 797 799 also included in Young and Kaiser pp 3 4 and Tropp pp 182 184 Massachusetts Admits Sacco Vanzetti Injustice The New York Times July 19 1977 Archived from the original on November 6 2012 Retrieved June 2 2010 Governor Dukakis Discusses Impending Exoneration of Sacco and Vanzetti PDF iCue interview transcript August 23 1977 Archived from the original PDF on March 16 2012 Retrieved June 2 2010 The Case That Will Not Die The New York Times Editorial May 22 1977 Archived from the original on November 6 2012 Retrieved June 2 2010 An editorial on the occasion of the publication of Katherine Anne Porter s The Never Ending Wrong urging Dukakis to concede that Massachusetts justice did not acquit itself well in this case and to acknowledge the enduring doubts about it The New York Times Sacco Vanzetti Vote Reversed August 16 1977 Archived February 9 2014 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 2 2010 Rick Collins Forgotten victims Descendants say both were hard working family men Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Patriot Ledger June 2 2010 accessed July 31 2008 Evie Gelastopoulos Sacco Vanzetti memorial unveiled in Boston Herald August 24 1997 Editorial Sacco Vanzetti skepticism Boston Herald August 21 1997 Peter B Agnes Jr presiding judge of the Charlestown District Court Op Ed Sacco and Vanzetti Another view Boston Herald August 27 1992 Stephanie Schorow 70 years later jury remains out on Sacco and Vanzetti Boston Herald August 22 1997 Beevor Antony The Battle for Spain Penguin Books 2006 p 127 International Steam A Moscow Railway Miscellany Russia 2010 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 9 2010 Google Maps Sacco and Vanzetti Apartment Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 9 2010 Watson pp 360 371 Malamut earns Eagle Scout ranking Jewish Journal October 10 2019 Archived from the original on November 16 2019 James Thurber and Elliott Nugent The Male Animal NY Samuel French 1939 pp 1 15 17 41 128ff Jay Reiner Theater Review Voices On The Wind American Renegade Theatre The Hollywood Reporter April 5 2000 Leonard J Lehrman Marc Blitzstein A Bio Bibliography Westport CT Praeger Publishers 2005 p 527 Eugene H Cropsey Sacco and Vanzetti An American Opera Premiere Opera Quarterly 2003 vol 19 4 754 780 accessed July 10 2010 The Wheels of Justice Circa 1927 via a Robot and Herky Jerky Puppets The New York Times December 8 2014 Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved April 23 2014 Friday The Times Record Troy NY May 28 1960 p 46 Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved June 12 2016 via Newspapers com The Good Shoemaker and the Poor Fish Peddler IMDb Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved February 6 2020 Internet Movie Database Sacco amp Vanzetti 1971 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback 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Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed May 8 2011 Upton Sinclair Boston A Novel NY Albert amp Charles Boni 1928 Reissued as Boston A Documentary Novel of the Sacco Vanzetti Case Cambridge MA R Bentley 1978 H G Wells Mr Blettsworthy on Rampole Island London 1928 Whitney Museum of American Art Ben Shahn 1898 1969 The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti 1931 32 Archived July 28 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 3 2010 Ali Shehad Zaidi Powerful Compassion The Strike At Syracuse in Monthly Review September 1999 Six of One gutenberg net au Retrieved January 24 2022 Frank Moorhouse Grand Days Sydney Pan Macmillan Publishers 1993 The New York Times Brooks Atkinson Winterset and Mr Anderson October 6 1935 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 2 2010 Internet Movie Database Winterset 1936 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 2 2010 Michael Denning The Cultural Front The Laboring of American Culture in the Twentieth Century NY Verso 1997 p 193 available online The New York Times 1 Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback MachineF O Matthiessen James T Farrell s Human Comedy May 12 1946 accessed July 2 2010 Mark Binelli Sacco and Vanzetti Must Die Chicago Dalkey Archive Press 2006 Kurt Vonnegut on Jailbird His Watergate Novel Wnyc org December 26 2013 Archived from the original on November 28 2017 Retrieved August 23 2017 Manning Shaun June 23 2011 Geary Recounts The Lives of Sacco amp Vanzetti Cbr com Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved January 4 2019 Paradies Amerika www projekt gutenberg org Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved January 9 2020 Laurie Margo 2022 The Anarchist s Wife A novella of the 1920s Sacco amp Vanzetti case Calleia Press ISBN 9781739898144 They Are Dead Now Eulogy for Sacco and Vanzetti Gmu edu Archived from the original on February 16 2021 Retrieved February 16 2021 Allen Ginsberg Howl and Other Poems San Francisco City Lights Books 1956 p 42 Carl Sandburg Selected Poems edited by George Hendrick and Willene Hendrick San Diego Harcourt Brace 1996 p 63 View PoemHunter Justice Denied In Massachusetts Archived February 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 2 2010 William Carlos William Collected Poems 1921 1931 NY The Objectivist Press 1934 Lewis Alun 1945 Ha Ha Among the Trumpets London George Allen amp Unwin Works cited EditParr James L 2009 Dedham Historic and Heroic Tales from Shiretown Arcadia Publishing Incorporated ISBN 9781625842770 Retrieved August 15 2019 Further reading EditPaul Avrich Anarchist Voices An Oral History of Anarchism in America Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1996 ISBN 9780691044941 Paul Avrich Sacco and Vanzetti The Anarchist Background Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1991 ISBN 9780691026046 Eli Bortman Sacco amp Vanzetti Boston Commonwealth Editions 2005 ISBN 9781889833767 Robert D Attilio La Salute e in Voi the Anarchist Dimension in Sacco Vanzetti Developments and Reconsiderations 1979 Conference Proceedings Boston Trustees of the Public Library of the City of Boston 1982 ISBN 9780890730676 Luigi Botta Sacco e Vanzetti giustiziata la verita prefazione di Pietro Nenni Edizioni Gribaudo Cavallermaggiore Robert D Attilio La Salute e in Voi the Anarchist Dimension in Sacco Vanzetti Developments and Reconsiderations 1978 Luigi Botta La marcia del dolore I funerali di Sacco e Vanzetti Una storia del Novecento introduzione di Giovanni Vanzetti contributi di Robert D Attilio e Jerry Kaplan contiene DVD del funerale Nova Delphi Libri Roma 2017 ISBN 9788897376569 Luigi Botta Sacco amp Vanzetti Cronologia Strumenti di ricerca Edizioni Cristoforo Beggiami Savigliano 2017 Luigi Botta 1927 2017 Sacco e Vanzetti Istituto Storico della Resistenza Cuneo 2017 Luigi Botta Le carte di Vanzetti Nino Aragno Editore Torino 2019 ISBN 9788884199966 Herbert B Ehrmann The Case That Will Not Die Commonwealth vs Sacco and Vanzetti Boston Little Brown and Company 1969 ISBN 9780491000246 Howard Fast The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti A New England Legend New York Blue Heron Press 1953 ISBN 9780837155845 David Felix Protest Sacco Vanzetti and the Intellectuals Bloomington IN Indiana University Press 1965 Roberta Strauss Feuerlicht Justice Crucified The Story of Sacco and Vanzetti McGraw Hill Book Company 1977 Felix Frankfurter The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti Atlantic Monthly March 1927 Reprinted in book form as The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti A Critical Analysis for Lawyers and Laymen Boston Little Brown and Company 1927 James Grossman The Sacco Vanzetti Case Reconsidered in Commentary January 1962 Brian Harris Injustice Sutton Publishing 2006 Brian Jackson The Black Flag A Look Back at the Strange Case of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti Boston Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1981 G Louis Joughin and Edmund M Morgan The Legacy of Sacco and Vanzetti New York Harcourt Brace and Company 1948 Joseph B Kadane and David A Schum A Probabilistic Analysis of the Sacco and Vanzetti Evidence Wiley Series in Probability amp Mathematical Statistics 1996 Murray Kempton Part of our Time Some Monuments and Ruins of the Thirties New York Simon amp Schuster 1955 Eugene Lyons The Life and Death of Sacco and Vanzetti New York International Publishers 1927 Eugene Lyons Assignment in Utopia New York Harcourt Brace 1937 Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruling denying new trial at Case citation 255 Mass 369 decided May 12 1926 Robert Montgomery Sacco Vanzetti The Murder and the Myth New York Devin Adair 1960 Michael Musmanno After Twelve Years New York Alfred A Knopf 1939 John Neville Twentieth Century Cause Celebre sic Sacco Vanzetti and the Press 1920 1927 Westport CT Praeger 2004 Richard Newby Kill Now Talk Forever Debating Sacco and Vanzetti Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2002 Katherine Anne Porter The Never Ending Wrong Boston Little Brown 1977 Report to the Governor in the Matter of Sacco and Vanzetti Boston Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1977 Francis Russell Sacco and Vanzetti The Case Resolved New York Harper amp Row 1986 Francis Russell Tragedy in Dedham The Story of the Sacco Vanzetti Case New York McGraw Hill 1962 Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti The Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti New York Octagon Books 1928 Nicola Sacco The Sacco Vanzetti Case New York Russell amp Russell 1931 Sacco Vanzetti Developments and Reconsiderations 1979 Conference Proceedings Boston Trustees of the Public Library of the City of Boston 1979 The Sacco Vanzetti Case Transcript of the Record of the Trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in the Courts of Massachusetts 6 vols New York Henry Holt amp Co 1928 29 Upton Sinclair Boston A Documentary Novel of the Sacco Vanzetti Case Cambridge R Bentley 1978 James E Starrs Once More Unto the Breech The Firearms Evidence in the Sacco and Vanzetti Case Revisited Journal of Forensic Sciences 1986 pp 630 654 1050 1078 Susan Tejada In Search of Sacco amp Vanzetti Double Lives Troubled Times amp the Massachusetts Murder Case that Shook the World Boston Northeastern University Press 2012 Moshik Temkin The Sacco Vanzetti Affair America on Trial New Haven CT Yale University Press 2009 Lorenzo Tibaldo Sotto un cielo stellato Vita e morte di Nicola Sacco e Bartolomeo Vanzetti Turin Claudiana 2008 Michael M Topp The Sacco and Vanzetti Case A Brief History with Documents Boston Bedford St Martin s 2005 Bruce Watson Sacco and Vanzetti The Men the Murders and the Judgment of Mankind New York Viking Press 2007 Robert P Weeks Commonwealth vs Sacco and Vanzetti Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall 1958 William Young and David E Kaiser Postmortem New Evidence in the Case of Sacco and Vanzetti Amherst MA University of Massachusetts Press 1985 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sacco and Vanzetti Wikiquote has quotations related to Bartolomeo Vanzetti The Sacco Vanzetti case at the Kate Sharpley Library The Sacco and Vanzetti Commemoration Society Sacco and Vanzetti Archive at marxists org Carol Vanderveer American Writers and the Sacco Vanzetti Case 2001 Sacco and Vanzetti Documentary The Sacco Vanzetti Case An Account Famous American Trials Overview of case by Professor Douglas O Linder UMKC School of Law Nicola Sacco at Library of Congress with 16 library catalog records Bartolomeo Vanzetti at Library of Congress with 24 library catalog records Sacco Vanzetti Case Records 1920 1928 at the Harvard Law School Library Historical amp Special Collections Sacco Vanzetti Trial newspaper clippings April November 1927 at the Harvard Law School Library Historical amp Special Collections Sacco and Vanzetti collections Robert D Farber University Archives amp Special Collections Department Brandeis University Boston Massachusetts 4 separate archives 1 Francis Russell collection 1921 1965 2 Gardner Jackson Collection 1896 1965 3 Mrs Walter Frank Collection 1927 1963 4 Tom O Connor Collection 1920 1965 Citizens National Committee for Sacco Vanzetti Sacco Vanzetti National League Robert D Farber University Archives amp Special Collections Department Brandeis University Boston Massachusetts Frankfurter Felix The Case of Sacco and Vanzetti A Critical Analysis for Lawyers and Laymen at Google Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sacco and Vanzetti amp oldid 1171976334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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