Rose Butler


Rose Butler was an enslaved domestic worker in New York City. In 1819, she was hanged for arson. At the time, the only capital crimes in New York State were first degree arson and murder. Butler was the penultimate person executed in New York State for arson. The last person to be executed in arson in the state was a white man named Horace Conkling in 1851.
Rose Butler's execution was a watershed in many respects. The context surrounding her crime and sentencing highlights community anxieties, shifting ideologies on race and status, and gives a glimpse of what the institution of slavery was like in New York City, a subject that is seldom discussed.

Early life

Butler was born in November 1799, in Mount Pleasant, New York. She was described as intelligent and having had "the benefit of instruction". She lived with a Colonel Straing, at Mount Pleasant, and was sold to various households later moved to New York City in order to live with Abraham Child. In 1817, she moved to live with William L. Morris.

Arson conviction and death sentence

In 1819, Butler was arrested for arson. She was charged with attempting to burn down the family home with the family inside; the damage was minor, but she was convicted and sentenced to death. The New York Supreme Court, after an appeal, ruled that what she did constituted first degree arson. After incarceration at Bridewell Prison she was hanged near present-day Washington Square Park, from a gallows in the city's potter's field, on the eastern side of Minetta Creek, about from the Hangman's Elm. The hanging attracted an estimated 10,000 spectators.
The following doggerel lines were recalled 50 years later as having been "chalked about the fences":

Media

The New-York Historical Society holds "a confession, statements, and an affidavit", a total of seven items. Included is a statement of Eliza Duell, a white woman placed in the apartment holding Butler during her arrest.