Mecklenburg County NcArchives News.....The Shooting of Wm. J. Norment April 23, 1840 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/nc/ncfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Carolyn Shank Carolynshank@msn.com January 7, 2008, 4:19 pm April 23, 1840 Charlotte Journal April 23, 1840 EDITOR'S NOTE: MR. NORMENT was raised in this vicinity, where his parents now reside; and he has left them with many friends and relatives to mourn his melancholy loss. -- EDITOR CHARLOTTE JOURNAL DIED, in this place on the 2nd inst., WILLIAM J. NORMENT. While quietly walking the street, he was shot down in the most unprovoked and wanton manner, by an individual to whom he had given no offense. Probably the annals of crime afford no parallel to this most unfortunate and shocking deed. The wretched man who perpetrated the act seemed to feel no regard whatsoever for human life, nor estimation of its vallue. Apparently, without a ray of feeling or reflection, he thrust the innocent and inoffensive into the damp and gloomy receptacle of death with all the carelessness and irrational bearing of a being raving with madness or stolid with idiocy. While attaching all proper blame to the assassin,m the mortifying truth cannot be disguised that a tendency to this crime is created and fostered by the customs or feelings of the community in which we life. When an individual has been injured, he takes the liberty of judging to what extent he has been wronged, and rights himself with a strong hand. And it seems when such wrong exists -- when one is out of suit with fortune, or disappointed in llife or expectations, his chagrin can only be quieted by blood, though it flow from the veins of his fellow man. What a sarcastic commentary it is upon the enlighted law, and civilized humanity of which we boast, that are lives are held at the uncertain tenure of each other's willl! That no guaranty for personal safety is found in the consciousness we possess of what is due to each other and ourselves. How far was it from the amiable and unoffending NORMENT, that he was about to be thrust by the murderer's hand into the presence of the Eternal Judge. He came upon unknown, and by his amiable conduct; his gentlemanly demeanor, strict business habits and harmless life, had acquired the esttem and confidence of all with whom he came in contact -- the enmity of none. He hoped by his indutry and attention to buisiness to establish himself in life, and to become the prop and support of a fond mother, who in declining years, he wished to comfort and protect with as kind a hand as that which tended him. But his cherished visions all were doomed to vanish in a moment. Suddenly we were called upon to witness his dying agonies on the cold earth of the common street, with no kind relative near to close his eyes or receive his expiring look. Although surrounded by sympathizing strangers who bitterly regret his hopeless fate; there was a dreary solitude in the manner of his end; -- far from his native home, his kindred and the friends of his early youth. In this busy and callous land, his death will soon be forgotten; but there are those in a distant State, whose eyes long hence will moisten and whose hearts will throb at his remembrance. EDITOR'S NOTE: MR. NORMENT was raised in this vicinity, where his parents now reside; and he has left them with many friends and relatives to mourn his melancholy loss. -- FROM THE CANTON MADISON WHIG File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/nc/mecklenburg/newspapers/theshoot106nnw.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ncfiles/ File size: 3.8 Kb