Hope H. Slatter II
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Hope H. Slatter II (1841 – after 1900) was a convicted murderer, municipal police chief, Confederate States Army veteran, and one of the sons of notable American slave trader Hope H. Slatter.


Biography

Slatter was born in 1841 in
Baltimore Baltimore is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Maryland. With a population of 585,708 at the 2020 census and estimated at 568,271 in 2024, it is the 30th-most populous U.S. city. The Baltimore metropolitan area is the 20th-large ...
, before his father sold out of the slaving business and became a real estate investor in
Mobile, Alabama Mobile ( , ) is a city and the county seat of Mobile County, Alabama, United States. The population was 187,041 at the 2020 United States census, 2020 census. After a successful vote to annex areas west of the city limits in July 2023, Mobil ...
. Slatter grew up in Mobile, and eventually attended Georgetown College (later
Georgetown University Georgetown University is a private university, private Jesuit research university in Washington, D.C., United States. Founded by Bishop John Carroll (archbishop of Baltimore), John Carroll in 1789, it is the oldest Catholic higher education, Ca ...
), class of 1862. When the American Civil War broke out he joined the
Confederate States Army The Confederate States Army (CSA), also called the Confederate army or the Southern army, was the Military forces of the Confederate States, military land force of the Confederate States of America (commonly referred to as the Confederacy) duri ...
, apparently as a second lieutenant in the
1st Alabama Infantry Regiment The 1st Alabama Infantry Regiment was a Confederate volunteer infantry unit from the state of Alabama during the American Civil War. Organization The 1st Alabama Infantry Regiment completed its organization at Pensacola, Florida about the 1 ...
. In 1863 he accidentally shot and killed one Thomas Carver. According to an affidavit submitted in 1875, "Mr. Slatter was fully exonerated from all intentional blame, so much so that it was not thought necessary to have a trial of the case at all. Being the commanding officer of the battalion at the time of the sad occurrence, the deponent rice Williams Jr. of Mobile, Alabamamade this statement in justice to the character of the living and the dead." On August 6, 1873, while attending the Schuetzenfest "annual shooting competition and beer bash" at Schuetzen Park in Washington, D.C., Slatter stabbed and killed one Michael Hussey. Slatter fled the scene of the crime but was captured in Virginia; when the police caught up with him he had with him a spring-back dagger and was sitting under a tree with a picnic basket that had been packed with "a lot of crackers, three fresh boiled spring chickens on toast, a bottle of fine brandy, and a box of matches." Slatter Jr. was convicted of murder by a jury, but used his "considerable" inherited slave-trade wealth to bribe a federal district attorney to get him out of a murder conviction, he then testified against the attorney on charges of accepting a bribe. During his fewer than three years in prison for murder, Slatter apparently did not enjoy the hospitality of the
Albany Penitentiary Albany Penitentiary was an American prison in Albany, New York that operated from 1848 until 1931. The prison was designed by Amos Pillsbury, also the first superintendent. Until the American Civil War, the main type of for-profit prison labor don ...
and "told a piteous tale of the severity of the discipline, by which the convicts are compelled to keep their eyes on the ground and not allowed to utter a syllable under pain of punishment by the shower bath, dark dungeon, flogging, etc." In 1883, Slatter was appointed to be the chief of police of Mobile, Alabama. In 1890, Hope H. Slatter II reached a deal with the U.S. government to pay $300 to fulfill a bond guarantee made by his uncle, capitalist Shadrack F. Slatter. (Back in November 1857, federal marshals had arrested freelance imperialist
William Walker William Walker may refer to: Arts * William Walker (engraver) (1791–1867), mezzotint engraver of portrait of Robert Burns * William Sidney Walker (1795–1846), English Shakespearean critic * William Walker (composer) (1809–1875), American Bap ...
; politician
Pierre Soulé Pierre Soulé (August 31, 1801March 26, 1870) was a French-born American attorney, politician, and diplomat in the mid-19th century. Database at Serving as a U.S. senator from Louisiana from 1849 to 1853, he was nominated that year as U.S. Min ...
and "Col. Slatter" posted the $2,000 bond for the standard bearer of the planned Golden Circle greater pro-slavery prosperity sphere. Walker jumped bail, leaving S. F. Slatter on the hook for the money). Hope H. Slatter Jr. was a resident of Mobile, Alabama as of the 1900 U.S. census."United States Census, 1900", ''FamilySearch'' (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M9DN-Y8L : Wed Mar 06 07:08:46 UTC 2024), Entry for Hope P Slatter and Honora G. Slatter, 1900. He is most likely buried in the family mausoleum at Magnolia Cemetery in Mobile, Alabama.


See also

* Henry F. Slatter, his older half-brother


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Slatter, Hope H. 2 1841 births 20th-century deaths Law enforcement officials from Alabama People from Mobile, Alabama Confederate States Army officers American municipal police chiefs Slatter family Georgetown University College of Arts & Sciences alumni