Masked Shooter, Campus Killing, And A Manhunt 159 Years Before Columbine

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
On the morning of
Nov
15, 1840, the Richmond Enquirer reported the nation's first campus shooting on the bottom corner of Page 2.In a single paragraph labeled
"Painful Occurrence," the paper said John A.G
Davis, a beloved University of Virginia law professor, "was shot by an unknown hand, with a pistol, in front of his dwelling" and "the ball
was received just below the navel."Davis died
A manhunt was on for his killer.Now almost totally forgotten, the episode bears some resemblance to the modern scourge of school shootings -
from the 13 people who died at Columbine High School 19 years ago on April 20, 1999, to the recent slayings at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High
School in Florida.The senselessness of motive
The randomness of victims
The gun culture gone awry.Back in the country's early days, students were prone to riot over the smallest matters - for instance, cabbage.In
telling the story of the professor's death, Virginia Magazine noted this:"In the early 19th century, rioting was a common practice in the
United States among students who either didn't like the food, the rules or the punishments meted out to them
William and Mary students rioted in 1802 after professors punished two fellow classmates for dueling
Bad food - old fish and overripe cabbage - ignited Harvard's Rotten Cabbage Rebellion in 1807."In Charlottesville that November, students at
the university founded by Thomas Jefferson were not, as far as we know, concerned with cabbage.Their beef: guns.Matthew Pearl, a novelist
who wrote a short story based on the shooting, described the clash in an essay for The HuffPost in 2011:"For several years at the University
of Virginia, students had an annual tradition of raising hell around campus, burning tar barrels and shooting pistols into the air
The rioters wanted the freedom to carry arms on campus and each year marked the anniversary when restrictions were put into place that
resulted in some defiant students being expelled."On the evening of Nov
12, gunfire erupted near the campus homes of the school's professors and staff
One of the students with a gun was Joseph Semmes, who like the others was wearing a mask.Davis heard the shots and "stepped out," Virginia
Magazine said, "to put a halt to the hullabaloo" and things went south from there:"Around 9:00 p.m., he saw one of the masked students
hiding behind one of the pillars
Davis jumped for him and reached to unmask the student
The student fled, but turned after a few steps, pointed his pistol, and, without uttering a word, fired at Davis' gut
The bullet pierced Davis' abdomen, and he fell to the ground with a groan
Students soon flocked to the pavilion as word spread that a professor had been shot
Several picked up Davis' limp, bleeding body and brought the wounded man inside."While students were, like today, not all that enthused with
authority, they were horrified by the death of a popular professor
Siding with administrators and police who asked for help, students hunted down Semmes, finding him a day or so later in a pine grove
Semmes seemed to care little about the professor's death, laughing and joking while in custody
When a judge asked him to take an oath on a bible to tell the truth, Semmes protested he was atheist.The next thing that happened would seem
shocking today: Semmes was released on bail.Not shocking: He disappeared.Rumors spread about his whereabouts for several years
Some students said they heard he moved to Texas
Others said he committed suicide
One rumor was correct, but it was only confirmed fairly recently.In 2013, Jean L
Cooper, a U-Va
librarian who maintains a blog about 19th-century U-Va
students, tracked down a Baltimore newspaper from July of 1847 that reprinted an item from The Charlottesville Republican about his
death."He shot himself with a pistol, the ball entering the left eye and penetrating the brain," the Charlottesville paper said, describing
his body slumped in a chair at his brother's house in Georgia
"On the table was found an open note, stating, in the form of a certificate, dated July 9th, 1847, that his death was occasioned by
himself.(This story has not been edited by staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)