The Window In Plumerville: John Middleton Clayton and the Unsolved Election Murder Behind a Stolen Ballot Box

Author:   Ricky Indrawan
Publisher:   Independently Published
ISBN:  

9798197444615


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   18 May 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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The Window In Plumerville: John Middleton Clayton and the Unsolved Election Murder Behind a Stolen Ballot Box


Overview

Before Clayton was killed, the vote was taken. In late January 1889, John Middleton Clayton arrived in Plumerville, Arkansas, with the burden of proof. The certified result of his 1888 congressional race said he had lost to Clifton Rodes Breckinridge, but the record pointed to a vanished poll book, a stolen ballot box, and a precinct whose missing votes could change everything. On January 29, 1889, the contest collapsed into one violent image: Clayton inside Mary Ann McCraven's rooming house, someone outside the window, and a gunshot that killed him instantly. The room became the center of a story about power, fear, and a record that explained motive more clearly than it named the shooter. The Window In Plumerville is a true crime account of an unsolved murder rooted in a congressional election dispute, racial intimidation, and witness danger in Conway County. How could votes disappear at gunpoint, witnesses come under pressure, and a candidate seeking evidence be silenced before the law could finish its work? The narrative follows the path from Howard / Plumerville precinct to the rooming house window, tracing the election fraud that placed Black voters at the center of the case. It examines Charles Wahl, the Bentley brothers, Mary Ann McCraven's house, the reward money, the Pinkerton investigation, the killing of Joseph W. Smith about one mile north of Plumerville, and the legal machinery that moved without a conviction. This is not a tale that turns suspicion into certainty. The record draws careful lines: Breckinridge as political beneficiary, not proven conspirator; Oliver Bentley as a figure in the ballot-box theft context, not a convicted murderer; late letters and disputed claims as artifacts, not answers. Who benefited from silence, and who paid the price for trying to speak? At its heart, this cold case is also a chapter of Arkansas history, where the struggle over Black political power, dissident white agrarian support, and Democratic restoration made the ballot more than paper. The political murder of John Middleton Clayton did not erase the voters of Howard Township and Plumerville; it revealed how dangerous their voices had become. This book contains no images-only cinematic narrative written in the style of a detective-investigator. Readers will uncover the timeline: the 1888 election, the masked theft of the box and poll book, the witness-pressure environment, Clayton's fatal trip to Plumerville, the failed investigation, the grand jury, the congressional contest, and the problem at the case's center. What does justice mean when an institution can correct an election, but no court names the person who fired through the window? This Book Is For Readers Who... - Want a historically grounded account of a case where the first crime scene was a precinct. - Are drawn to forensic questions, missing records, witness pressure, and investigative limits. - Care about victims, families, and communities as much as suspects and theories. - Follow stories where race, law, voting power, and violence meet in one documented trail. - Prefer suspense built from testimony, chronology, and restraint rather than shock. Perfect For Fans Of... - Historical investigations anchored in public records. - Southern political history with a human center. - Election-contest narratives involving fraud, intimidation, and consequence. - Unresolved nineteenth-century cases. - Courtroom-adjacent nonfiction with a reflective, investigative pace. The Window In Plumerville endures because it is not only about one man in one room. It is about a stolen vote, a widow and children left behind, a community whose ballots became evidence, and the difference between correcting a result and answering for blood. Read now and step into the room where a missing ballot box, a contested election, and a window changed polit

Full Product Details

Author:   Ricky Indrawan
Publisher:   Independently Published
Imprint:   Independently Published
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.390kg
ISBN:  

9798197444615


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   18 May 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Latest Reading Guide

RGJ26

 

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