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John McNeill, Murrieta Blacksmith


A black and white photo of men in the early 1900s laying cement with a tractor in the distance. There are 4 men as focal points, and trees in the background
A road crew is laying cement on Washington Avenue in 1915 as a part of the Inland Highway construction project. (Source: E Hale Curran Collec- tion. The Murrieta Public Library’s Heritage Room)





































 


His past is surrounded in mystery because he kept to himself the details of his early life. Historians do not know who his relatives were or where he was from.


What is known is that he was a skilled blacksmith, and he was newly married when he came to Murrieta with a highway construction crew in 1915. He was here for a brief time and then he picked up his tools and left town. Eventually he returned to Temecula in the early 1930s where a tragic event would unfold and then everyone would know his name, John McNeill.


According to his World War I Draft Card, John Daniel McNeill was born August 14, 1884 in Scotland. In census records he stated that he immigrated to America in 1900 or 1904. Later in life, an official document claimed that he was born in Massachusetts. Research suggests that his father may have been a Scottish immigrant who crossed the Canadian border and settled in Boston. As stated above, John McNeill came to Murrieta in 1915 during the paving of the county highway.


The Inland Highway was conceived as an alternative route between Los Angeles and San Diego. The highway wound its way from town to town across four counties. In December 1913, Riverside County voters passed a $1,125,000 Good Roads bond to pave the highway from San Bernardino to the San

Diego county line. In March 1915, Connors Construction Company in Los Angeles won the contract to pave 8.85 miles of the concrete highway segment from Elsinore to Murrieta for $26,712.97. The company hired John McNeill, a blacksmith, with his portable shop, to make repairs on tools and equipment when needed.


In April, the road crew made camp in Murrieta and began constructing the highway working its way north to Elsinore. By September, the construction crew had completed the contract. Connors Construction was then awarded the contract to pave the 8.67 mile long cement highway segment from Murrieta to the foot of the Temecula grade for $28,010.30.


The highway construction crew had laid six miles of concrete by October. While in Temecula, John McNeill met and befriended Al Knott, the town’s blacksmith.


“John could take care of sharpening plow points, picks and crowbars in his portable shop, but when it became necessary for him to shrink a set of wagon tires, or do other heavy iron work, he brought the job to Al’s blacksmith shop and usually worked nights to avoid interference with Al’s regular day time business. The men became good friends and Al typically refused to charge John for the use of his shop and equipment.” (The Last Thirteen Steps by Tom Hudson and Sam Hicks, The High Country, VL. 42)

In November, the crew camped once again in Murrieta. At the end of the month the highway paving project was completed. The Connors Construction Company then moved their camp to the foot of the

Jackrabbit Trail to pave the county road from Moreno to Beaumont, but John McNeill did not join them.


In December 1915, while John was in Murrieta, he learned that J. J. White and his family were moving back to Los Angeles. White was selling his blacksmith shop located at the corner of A Street and Washington Avenue. This business opportunity allowed John to establish a permanent residence for him and his new bride.


John McNeill’s wife, Melva Mabel Martin was born about 1886 in Jamestown, Cloud County, Kansas. She was the daughter of John W. and Elizabeth Martin. The Martin children were Flora B. (1871), William Edgar (1880), Melva (1886), Minnie (1890), Joseph Clarence (1893), and Mima P. (1895). The Martin family

moved to Orange County, California after 1900. John Martin died before 1910 and may have been laid to rest in an unmarked grave in the Santa Ana Cemetery.


John McNeill and Melva Martin were married possibly in Orange County. Their first daughter, Elizabeth, was born January 7, 1917 in Murrieta. After their daughter’s birth, their friends, Al and Freda Knott of

Temecula, visited the McNeills to see the new family member. The Knotts were also new parents with the birth of their twins, Vernon and Vera in 1916.


When America declared war on Germany in April 1917, President Woodrow Wilson ordered all German immigrants to immediately surrender their firearms as a demonstration of their loyalty. Riverside County

Sheriff Wilson deputized men to gather the guns throughout the area and turn them in at the sheriff’s office in Riverside.


Murrieta had a small population of German immigrants, most of whom worked at the Guenther’s Murrieta Hot Springs Resort. John McNeill was deputized and was asked to confiscate the German residents’ guns. McNeill faced challenges as he requested their firearms.


“Deputy John McNeil has seized several fire arms from incompetent persons since the publication of the proclamation by the president dated April 6, 1917. (Source: May 4, 1917, Lake Elsinore Valley Press)

In October 1917, John McNeill was offered a blacksmith position in Huntington Beach, California. It would have given Melva a chance to live near her mother and siblings again. McNeill sold the Murrieta blacksmith shop and moved to Orange County. A year later Melva’s mother died.


Between 1918 and 1930, John McNeill and his family lived in San Dimas, California where John continued to make a living as a blacksmith. John and Melva had four children, Elizabeth Jane (1917), John Robert (1919), Dorothy M. (1920), and Clara Alberta (1923).


In the early 1930s, the McNeills moved to Temecula and rented a home on Pujol Street. Then John rented Al Knott’s blacksmith shop for $36 a month. It is unclear if McNeill was reinstated as a deputy when he returned to the area.


Times were changing and the services of a blacksmith were declining. With little business, John found it more and more difficult to financially care for his family. Then on August 13, 1936, John came home around noon and began arguing with Melva over their insurance policy. He lost his temper and

clubbed his wife insensible using rollers from a washing machine wringer. She suffered a fractured skull, three fractured ribs and numerous bruises and contusions.


Around 1:00 p.m. their seventeen year old son, John R. McNeill, was walking home for lunch from his job at the local grocery store when he encountered his father. He was told by his father that someone had hit his mother. Young John went in the house and discovered his unconscious mother lying on the

kitchen floor. He immediately called the county sheriff and the county ambulance at Elsinore. Shortly afterwards his father also called the sheriff and declared a murder had been committed. When the boy looked at his father for answers, he noticed a drop of blood on his father’s glasses.


When authorities arrived on the scene, the blacksmith stated that he had come home and found his wife beaten by robbers. Melva and her son arrived by ambulance at the county hospital around 3:30 p.m. The doctors examined her, but the injuries were too severe. Before she breathed her last breathe, she whispered to her son that his father had committed the crime. She died at 7:45 p.m. and later

was laid to rest in Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana, California.


Investigators began looking for clues at the crime scene. The bloody wringer was found hidden in a box on the back porch. A stray dog led them to a rabbit hutch behind the house. There they found buried underneath the hutch McNeill’s bloody clothing. McNeill was arrested and taken to the county jail. At the court trial the jury found him guilty and sentenced him the death penalty.


When he arrived at San Quentin, authorities learned that it was his second visit. In 1908, he was known as Daniel McMaster. He was sentenced to prison for two years for forgery. He was later paroled, and when he violated his parole, officers couldn’t find him. It is unknown whether Daniel McMaster or John McNeill was his real name.


On July 9, 1937, John McNeill climbed the thirteen steps to the prison gallows and was hung for murdering his wife. His body was buried in an unmarked grave in the prison cemetery.


Two months later, his daughter, Elizabeth, married George Willard Wright on September 4, 1937, in Orange County, California. Her two younger sisters, Dorothy and Clara, lived with Elizabeth, and her husband, George until they were old enough to live on their own. Their brother, John Robert McNeill, left Temecula and joined the Navy. On November 16, 1944, John and 82 crew members lost their lives

when the Japanese bombed and sunk their submarine, the USS Scamp (SS-277). Elizabeth J. Wright, the last of the McNeill family, died on April 7, 2004 and was laid to rest in Phoenix, Arizona.


Today, John McNeill’s murderous tale has become a part of Old Town Temecula’s lore. However, it is important to remember that the tale first began not in Temecula, but in a Murrieta blacksmith shop.

Komentarze


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Jeffery Harmon,
President

Jeffery and his wife, Michelle, settled in Murrieta in 1995. He taught in the Lake Elsinore Unified School District for ten years, teaching Social Studies and Language Arts. Currently, he is a Certified Substitute Teacher for the Murrieta Valley Unified School District awaiting his next classroom assignment.

 

He is one of the founders of the Historic Route 395 Association.   For the past seventeen years, he has been a Southwest Riverside County historian, researcher, and author.

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