Photograph was edited for publication purposes. By the time she was in her late 30s, Louise Peete had left a trail of shattered lives in her wake from Boston, Massachusetts to Waco, Texas. She was the reason that two men had committed suicide; and she'd killed a man during an attempted rape--at least that was her story--the truth remains elusive. In 1920, Peete relocated to Los Angeles where she met middle-aged mining executive Jacob Denton, who was a recent widower, having lost both his wife and child in the Spanish Flu pandemic. Peete sized Denton up as a man who would be susceptible to her Southern charm. When her attempts to get him to marry her failed, she ordered Denton's caretaker to dump a ton of soil in the basement of the home. She said she intended to grow Denton's favorite mushrooms there. But then on May 30, 1920 Denton vanished. For months nobody questioned the tall tales Peete told to explain Denton's disappearance, until his attorney finally contacted the police and asked them to search the house. It took the cops about an hour of digging to unearth Denton's body. He had a bullet hole in his head. On February 8, 1921, Peete was convicted of his murder and sentenced to life in prison. She served eighteen years before being paroled in for good behavior in 1939. Her incarceration had done nothing to change her. She was out of prison for only five years before she killed again. Peete's final victim was Margaret Logan, a Good Samaritan who offered the ex-con employment as a housekeeper and companion. Logan's body was discovered in a shallow backyard grave at her Pacific Palisades home. An autopsy concluded that her death had been caused by a gunshot and a brutal beating. Peete's protestations of outraged innocence fell on deaf ears and she was convicted of murder again. Only this time around she was sentenced to death in the gas chamber. When the death sentence was handed down Peete turned to Aggie Underwood, who had been reporting the entire case, pinched her under the chin, and said, "Now don't you cry." A crowd of reporters spent time with Peete on her last nigh--among them was Underwood. Always a gracious hostess, Peete proffered a box of chocolates to be shared among them. Underwood later said of Peete, "She wasn't an artless little gun moll." Lofie Louise Preslar Peete was executed on April 11, 1947. She was the second woman to die in California's gas chamber; only two others would follow her. Louise Peete shown with her formerly estranged husband, Richard, during her trial for the murder of Jacob C. Denton. Photograph was used for an article dated August 25, 1927; it reads, "But Mrs. Peete was convicted and sent to San Quentin, while her husband, R. C. Peete, who is pictured with her, committed suicide."
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;29 x 14 cm. on board 31 x 18 cm. Photographic prints
Peete, Louise,--1888-1947 Peete, Louise,--1888-1947--Family Peete, Louise,--1888-1947--Trials, litigation, etc Female offenders--California--Los Angeles Trials (Murder)--California--Los Angeles Murderers--California--Los Angeles Criminals--California--Los Angeles Couples--California--Los Angeles Women--California--Los Angeles Men--California--Los Angeles Group portraits Portrait photographs Herald-Examiner Collection photographs
If you're wondering about permissions and what you can do with this item, a good starting point is the "rights information" on this page. See our terms of use for more tips.
Share your story
Has Calisphere helped you advance your research, complete a project, or find something meaningful? We'd love to hear about it; please send us a message.