The first part of the story can be read Here.
I will rehash the part when the duel first started in New Maryland, New Brunswick, Canada....
Two respected Fredericton attorneys had gotten into a dispute over a mishandling of a case and carried their arguments outside the courtroom to Queen street. With raised voices they berated each other with shouts of incompetence and impropriety.
There had long been competition between the law firms and it had carried down to the second generation. Although their fathers were highly regarded in the community, Street’s father resented being left out of the Loyalist circles of Wetmore's father.
George Ludlow Wetmore, overcome with rage and with little thought of the now his actions would affect his pregnant wife and children, sat by the evening fireplace and stewed about this altercation with Street.
By the next morning he had decided enough is enough and sent a John Winslow to deliver a formal challenge of a duel to George Frederick Street.
The duel was only known to the duelists, George Ludlow Wetmore & George Frederick Street, and their seconds, Winslow and Davies. The four men were to meet at a clearing behind John Segee’s farm.
The wives and children of the two Georges knew nothing of the fatal duel to take place.
On October 2, 1821, Street and his second, Richard Davies, reached the destinated meeting spot at 6 a.m. and waited for Wetmore and Winslow.
When they arrived, the four men then tied their horses and walked to a clearing behind John Segee’s farm, which was hidden from the farmhouse by thick woods.
The seconds, Winslow and Davies, measured off fifteen paces and the duelists took their places.
Wetmore brought the two pistols as Street owned no firearms. One gun was slightly inferior to the other. The seconds drew lots, and Street got the better weapon.
The seconds loaded the pistols with gun powder and handed the pistols, fully cocked, to the two Georges.
Standing on the sideline, Davies shouted out the rules,
”Pistols at your sides until ordered to fire; when ordered, raise one arm and fire as quickly as possible without aiming or stopping.”
Fact: No sense in careful aiming as pistols didn’t shoot straight before changes to the calibre were made in 1830.
“Fire!”
Both men fired, and both stood unhurt. Immensely relieved, the seconds declared that honor had been satisfied and that was the end of it.
Wetmore insisted on one more shot. Dueling etiquette demanded an exchange of weapons for a second shot.
Wetmore may have felt confident he could succeed with the superior pistol.
“Fire!”
Davies shouted the command!
Two shots rang out in that crisp morning air of October 2, 1821.....
Wetmore fell to the ground, blood spurting from his arm and head. The ammunition from Street’s pistol had entered Wetmore’s extended arm above the wrist and exited below the elbow before ricocheting into Wetmore’s skull.
Twenty-six year old Wetmore, oldest son of a loyalist elite, was barely breathing.
Street knelt beside his challenger and cradled his bloodied opponent in his arms while John Winslow ran to John Segee’s farmhouse to get help. He wanted to keep this hush-hush and mentioned no names. Dueling was now illegal and the three men were in serious trouble, especially if Wetmore dies...
John Segee sent one of his sons for a doctor. With another son, he helped carry Wetmore to his farmhouse to wait for the doctor.
As soon as Street and the two seconds heard the sound of horses coming, they knew they had to get out of there or be arrested.
They mounted their horses and rode towards St. Andrews. There they acquired fresh horses and headed for the U.S.A., crossing the border at Robbinstown, Maine.
source
Wetmore was pronounced dead at 10:07 A.M. Friends of the Wetmores were demanding justice and the coroner put out a notice for the other three men involved. A reward of ten pounds was offered but was never claimed.
Street and Davies decided to leave their fate in the hands of the law and surrendered in December; they were brought to trial on February 21, 1822.
Winslow evaded the law considerably longer.
The trial was presided over by Chief Justice John Sanders. There seemed to be an agreement between the parties involved that Wetmore was as much to blame for his own demise as Street, and there was nothing to be gained from a hanging.
John Segee and his sons, Abraham and Issac, testified they had not recognized the men with Wetmore that fateful morning.
At the trial, the judge instructed the jury,
“Should there be any doubt in cases of this kind, you acquit the prisoners, but in this case it is not in any shape legally brought home…One evidence, mentioning the dress of Mr. Street, said he had on a blue or black. It is proved by two witnesses, one being Street’s brother, that he never wore a blue or black coat.”
The jury voted for acquittal.
George Frederick Street returned home to his family and was restored to his law practice. He ran in politics, representing York County in the elections of 1827 and 1830. He was unsuccessful but later went on to become a judge of the Supreme Court.
Wetmore’s death would forever remain on the conscience of Street.
Street wrote of his thoughts about accepting the challenge of the duel with Wetmore.
“My honour and respectability are dearer to me than life, and when I am placed in a situation that obliges me to sacrifice both the former and risk the latter, I cannot for a moment hesitate which course to take…There are circumstances that may justify a man, even in the opinion of the world, in refusing a challenge, but this was not a case of that description; Had I refused to go out with him, I feel confident that I should have been condemned by every member of society and disgraced.”
George Frederick Street died at age sixty-eight. His wife and three children had all predeceased him.
The widow of George Ludlow Wetmore lived into her nineties. She never mentioned the duel or ever spoke to the Street family.
Footnote:
I have always been interested in this duel and heard about it many times when growing up within a hour drive of Fredericton.
Every time I drive to my sister’s cottage in New Brunswick I see the sign about the duel. There is a roadsign indicating this is the place of the of The last Fatal Duel on the TransCanada Highway before bypassing Fredericton.
I regret not having a photo of the sign and will definitely stop and take one next time I pass by that way.
The road sign reads:
WELCOME TO NEW MARYLAND
NEW BRUNSWICK’S LAST FATAL DUEL...
and RESTING PLACE
EXIT 285 A
#thealliance