MRS. J.W. COLEMAN, Sworn for the State, 1st To Testify
I am Mary Phagan’s mother. I last saw her alive on the 26th day of April 1913, about a quarter to twelve, at home, at 146 Lindsey Street. She was getting ready to go to the pencil factory to get her pay envelope. About 11:30 [o'clock a.m.], she ate some cabbage and bread. She left home at a quarter to twelve. She would have been fourteen years old the first day of June, was fair complected, heavy set, very pretty, and was extra large for her age. She had on a lavender dress, trimmed in lace and a blue hat. She had dimples in her cheeks.
CROSS EXAMINATION
The blue hat that is seen here is the hat the little girl had on that day. It had some pale blue ribbon and some flowers when she left home. It was a small bunch of little pink flowers right in the center. We live two blocks from the street car line. There is a store there at the place she usually get on the car kept by Mrs. Smith. Epps is a neighbor of ours. He was a friend of Mary’s. He wasn’t the special friend of hers.
RE-DIRECT EXAMINATION
These are the clothes that she wore on the day (State’s Exhibit “M”).
- Introduction to Leo Frank Trial Brief, 1913 [Last Updated On: January 9th, 2025] [Originally Added On: January 9th, 2025]