Later that day, Kildorf’s body was discovered, and the
authorities tracked Wilbur to his father’s house. They arrested him and brought
him before Esquire Simpson. Wilbur waived examination and was committed to
jail.
George Wilbur was from a good family and was “respectably connected.”
Michael Kildorf was a stranger in North Plains, living with his aunt, Mrs.
Burke.
The public sentiment in North Plains was overwhelmingly in
Wilbur’s favor. A correspondent who did not share the “maudlin sympathy for
murderers” commented sarcastically:
Now is the time to commence sympathy for poor Wilbur. Oh! he must be in jail! How unpleasant it must be when Kildorf is so comfortable underground, below the frost. Will poor Wilbur have to be tried? He ought not to be, for he must have been insane—poor fellow. Oh, how easy he whipped out that pistol and drove that bullet into the back of Kildorf's bead! He must have been ready at any time—poor fellow. And then if he had missed Kildorf's head how bad he would have felt. I hope he won't have to be tried. Can't we get him out on low bail, and then let him off—it will be so unpleasant for him to stay in jail and then be tried? And then if we had hanging for murder, how bad the poor fellow would feel when they put the rope round his neck. And then if he should be ten or fifteen minutes in dying, when he slipped Kildorf off in about one minute, and so easy. And then to be hung up and not touch the ground! Oh! horrible! Oh, the poor fellow! He will go straight to Heaven, of course.
It does not appear that George Wilbur was ever tried or
sentenced for the murder.
Sources:
“A Deliberate Young Murderer,” Illustrated Police News, February 15, 1879.
“A Youthful Murderer,” Detroit Free Press, January 30, 1879.
“A Youthful Murderer,” The Inter Ocean, January 30, 1879.
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