
Clarke County in Iowa
Leonard L. DeLong
Homicide
Leonard L. DeLong
52 YOA
Washington Township
Clarke County
September 9, 1904
In 1904, when wealthy Clarke County farmer Leonard L. DeLong died suddenly the day after his 52nd birthday, family and neighbors in Washington Township assumed it was from a heart attack.
His funeral was held and he was buried.
Doubts Arise
However, DeLong’s sons Homer and Leroy had lingering suspicions about the death.
Their strong and robust father died 30 minutes after consuming a whiskey with quinine water.
And, significantly, he recently made out a new will.
A Secret Exhumation and the Aftermath
The DeLong brothers obtained a court order to secretly exhume their father’s body at the end of December 1904, almost four months after his death.
DeLong’s vital organs were sent to the lab of Des Moines Professor Sherman Riley Macy, an expert in poisons. Macy found strychnine.
Courtesy photo Biographies and Portraits of the Progressive Men of Iowa
- Professor Sherman R. Macy found strychnine in Leonard DeLong’s vital organs.
On January 14, 1905, Professor Macy accompanied the DeLong brothers to the office of Iowa Governor Albert B. Cummins, who listened carefully to the facts.
After the meeting, Governor Cummins issued a $200 reward for information leading to the person who laced Leonard DeLong’s whiskey with strychnine.
This public proclamation was the first time Clarke County citizens learned Leonard DeLong’s death was not from natural causes.
The Investigation
The Clarke County Sheriff, a man named Banker, and Mr. Scott, County Attorney, gathered evidence for a prosecution, focusing on those closest to DeLong.
They settled on son-in-law Clark Williams, the 32-year-old husband of Leonard DeLong’s daughter Sylvia Mae. He was present at the DeLong farm the night of the poisoning, but left so quickly after the whiskey was drunk that he was back at his own farm before the victim died.
His motive? To obtain an inheritance from DeLong’s new will.
In November 1905 — well over a year after DeLong’s death — an Osceola grand jury indicted Clark Williams for murder.
His bond was set at $15,000; attorneys arranged an agreement reducing that amount to $10,000.
The murder trial was set to take place in February 1906 in Osceola.
Newspapers, however, reported that Williams was sick with appendicitis-like symptoms and was too ill to stand trial if he did not improve.
After he recovered, Williams — whose name was incorrectly reported as “Williamson” in some early news accounts — was put on trial in May.
On May 7, 1906, Judge Hiram K. Evans dismissed the case against Williams, saying the evidence presented at trial was not as strong as that presented to the grand jury and was insufficient to convict.
The community was shocked by this sudden and unexpected turn of events.
Clark Williams and Sylvia Mae DeLong divorced before 1930, and she married Jacob Steven Hart.
Williams died in Des Moines on August 6, 1947 at the age of 74 and is buried in the same cemetery as Leonard DeLong, the man he was once accused of poisoning.
The Life of Leonard L. DeLong
Leonard L. DeLong was born September 8, 1852 in Tuscarawas, Ohio, to Hannah Engles and Ephraim DeLong, Sr. He had three brothers — Fenton DeLong, Jasper N. DeLong, and Ephraim DeLong, Jr. — and six sisters: Almira Jane DeLong Kelley, Margaret A. DeLong, May E. DeLong, Hannah Ellen DeLong Coker, Nancy Sarah DeLong Forney, and Ruth A. DeLong.
Courtesy photo Iowa Gravestone Photo Project
- Leonard DeLong is buried in Maple Hill Cemetery not far from the grave of the man who was accused, but not convicted, of killing him.
The DeLong family left Ohio and settled in Iowa in the mid-1850s.
In 1873, Leonard married Frances Izora Foreman and they had five children: Homer Clidell DeLong, Sylvia Mae DeLong Williams Hart, Ellen DeLong, Lydia May DeLong Hulsey, Leroy DeLong, and Nellie Grace DeLong Jenks.
Leonard DeLong is buried with his wife Frances in Osceola’s Maple Hill Cemetery.
Above his name on the tombstone are engraved the words “Asleep In Jesus” and below, “Gone But Not Forgotten.”
Information Needed
Questions and information about the unsolved 1904 death of Leonard L. DeLong should be directed to the Clarke County Sheriff’s Office at 641-342-2914 or Iowa Cold Cases through the Contact form.
Sources
- “200 Dollars For Murderer,” Waterloo Times-Tribune, January 24, 1905.
- “Acquitted of Murder Charge,” Milford Mail, May 17, 1906.
- “Believe Father Was Slain,” Cedar Rapids Gazette, January 20, 1905.
- “Clark Williams Very Ill,” Sioux County Herald, January 31, 1906.
- “Iowa State News,” Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette, January 17, 1905.
- “Neighborhood News,” Adams County Free Press, January 18, 1905.
- “The News in Iowa,” Titonka Topic, November 23, 1905.
- “Son-In-Law Is Held,” Sioux Valley News, November 23, 1905.
“State News In Brief,” Semi-Weekly Reporter, February 2, 1906.
- “Williamson [sic] Indicted for Murder,” Malvern Leader, November 23, 1905.
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