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  2. William Williams (murderer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Williams_(murderer)

    William Williams (c. 1877 – 13 February 1906) was a Cornish miner and the last person executed by the state of Minnesota in the United States. Williams was convicted for the 1905 murders of 16-year old John Keller and his mother, Mary Keller in Saint Paul, and his subsequent botched execution led to increased support for the abolition of capital punishment in Minnesota in 1911.

  3. List of people executed in Minnesota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_executed_in...

    Notably, on December 26, 1862, Minnesota was the site of the largest mass execution in United States history when 38 men, all Dakota men involved in the Dakota War of 1862, were simultaneously executed by hanging on the same gallows in Mankato, Minnesota, after being convicted of various capital crimes including murder, being an accessory to ...

  4. Capital punishment in Minnesota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Capital_punishment_in_Minnesota

    Between 1854 and Minnesota's final execution in 1906, at least 70 people were executed in the Minnesota Territory and the State of Minnesota, all by hanging. [1] [2] The first execution in Minnesota's history was the 1854 hanging of a Native American man, known in Anglicanized spelling as Uhazy or Yuhagu, for murder.

  5. Ann Bilansky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Bilansky

    Ann Bilansky (born Mary Ann Evards Wright) (c. 1820 – March 23, 1860) was an American housewife convicted in 1859 of poisoning her husband with arsenic. [1] [2] She is the only woman in Minnesota to receive the death penalty and the first white person in the state to be executed by hanging.

  6. Dakota War of 1862 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dakota_War_of_1862

    On August 16, 1862, the treaty payments to the Dakota arrived in St. Paul, Minnesota, ... The "Hanging Monument" in Mankato, Minnesota, was a four-ton granite marker ...

  7. History of Saint Paul, Minnesota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Saint_Paul...

    Minnesota's first newspaper, the Minnesota Pioneer, the forerunner of today's St. Paul Pioneer Press, was established by James M. Goodhue in 1849. [18] Just west of downtown Saint Paul is the neighborhood of Irvine Park ; it was platted by John Irvine and Henry Mower Rice in 1849, and Saint Paul's oldest house, the Charles Symonds House (1850 ...

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  9. Danny Hogan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Hogan

    Dapper" Danny Hogan (c. 1880 - December 4, 1928) was an Irish-American organized crime figure, political fixer, and the boss of Saint Paul, Minnesota's Irish Mob both before and during Prohibition.