They were married in St. Patrick’s Church on June 17, 1869, in a ceremony performed by Surratt family priests Rev. J. A. Walter and Rev. J.J. Keane.
Just two days later, in Special Order No. 149, even as the couple enjoyed their honeymoon in New York, Tonry was fired from his job by Barnes, at the direction of Secretary of War John A. Rawlins, in a move supported and probably directed by President Ulysses S. Grant. The reason: Anna was the daughter of Mary Surratt, who was hanged July 7, 1865, after being found guilty of complicity in Lincoln’s assassination.
Mary Surratt was the first woman to be executed by the U.S. government. The hanging was controversial and the role she played in the assassination was debated for years. And in the case of Tonry’s firing, many accused the government of visiting the alleged sins of a parent on her daughter, calling it petty and mean-spirited. The Delaware State Journal opined: “The brutal and contemptible spirit manifested by the government in the dismissal of Annie Surratt’s husband is severely and justly denounced by the press throughout the whole country.”
The New York Herald called it “paltry meanness and worse than an inquisitorial persecution.” The New York World said it was “petty brutality.”
“Except the disgrace which his removal inflicted upon Secretary Rawlins and Surgeon General Barnes, there is no damaging incident in the retirement of Mr. Tonry because he married the innocent daughter of the innocent Mrs. Surratt,” noted the New York World.
The assassination irony continued. Judge Advocate General Joseph Holt, who prosecuted the case against Mary Surratt and other assassin conspirators, was said to have offered him a job. Tonry declined.
He next considered a job in Kansas, but decided to stay in the Baltimore-Washington area, taking a position with the Baltimore Copper Company. His career in the private world seemed to blossom after that and as the years went by, he held numerous civic, scholastic, and private positions, including professor of toxicology and hygiene at the Baltimore Medical College, membership in the Maryland Academy of Science, chemist to the Baltimore City Board of Health, and a professorship at Loyola College.
And he became a leading expert in nascent field of criminal forensics. Tonry was one of the few chemists in the nation touted as an expert on poison and blood analysis at that time. And that’s what brought him to Kent County, Md., on several occasions.
The first time, in 1887, was a poisoning case. The victim was Deborah Bradshaw, an elderly Black woman who lived just outside of Millington. Tonry was hired by State’s Attorney Marion deK. Smith to analyze the woman’s stomach contents to determine whether she was poisoned and if so, how.
It turned out that Bradshaw’s 15-year-old granddaughter, Sarah, had laced her grandmother’s tea with rat poison, of which arsenic was a chief component.
Based on his testimony, “the jury of inquest on the body of Deborah Bradshaw … on the strength of analysis made by Prof. W.P. Tonry, of Baltimore, rendered a verdict that she came to her death from the effects of poison and charged Sarah Bradshaw with having administered the [substance],” the Kent News reported in its June 4, 1887, edition.
Sarah Bradshaw was found guilty of second-degree murder and sentenced to 14 years in the penitentiary, dying before the end of her term.
Tonry was called upon again to testify in another fatal poisoning, that of Annie Gale, of Still Pond, who died on Oct. 15, 1891, after eating fried tomatoes the day before. After analyzing Gale’s stomach and liver, he concluded rat poison was again the culprit. A 19-year-old servant, Mary Brown, was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 18 years in the Maryland penitentiary.
The next investigation in Kent County that included his testimony made national headlines and resulted in a quadruple hanging at the Chestertown jail. It involved the murder of a White doctor, J. Heighe Hill, in April 1892, by a group of Black men and boys.
Hill, whose home and drugstore were in Millington, was responding to a house call late one night, riding north toward Massey in a two-wheeled cart, when he was attacked, stabbed, and beaten with a rock, sustaining a fatal blow to his head. He died the next day.
Tonry was hired by the state’s attorney to analyze blood, including stains found on the pants of one of the suspects. While blood typing and DNA testing were still far off, he testified that blood found in a pocket of a pair of pants was that of a mammal, and deduced that a bloody handkerchief had been placed in the pocket.
His testimony helped to secure a guilty verdict for eight of the suspects. In January 1893, four were hanged and the other four, the youngest, had their sentences commuted to life in prison.
Tonry testified in many cases throughout the region, some of which were sensational. He was highly touted in his field and enjoyed a long life with a large family.
But the shadow of the Lincoln assassination lingered and ironies continued for his wife and himself. Headlines were made even when his sons, Reginald and Albert, joined the Fifth Maryland Volunteer Regiment to fight in the Spanish American War in 1898. The camp where they began their service was commanded by Gen. Frederick D. Grant, the son of President Grant.
“These boys in fighting for their country were as loyal as any in the volunteer army — and still are, for they are now ready to go to Cuba — and they gloried in having for their commander the son of the man who had agreed to dismiss their father because he had married their mother,” noted the Catholic Union and Times in its July 14, 1898, edition.
William Tonry died Oct. 3, 1905, at the Baltimore home of his daughter, Clara Surratt Tonry, on Oct. 3, 1905. His remains were interred at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Washington, near those of his wife, who had died the year before.
“Dr. Tonry had more to do with murder cases than perhaps any other physician in this section of the country, and it is in this respect that he is so well-known to the people of Kent,” noted an obituary in the Oct. 7, 1905, edition of the Chestertown Transcript.
Kevin Hemstock writes from Millington. The former editor of the Kent County News, his book, Injustice on the Eastern Shore, was published in 2015. He has also self-published a number of books on the topic of local history.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk