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Chief
James C. Daily
Died - January 16, 1907
2/18/1863 –
1/16/1907
James Daily, Chief of Police of Red Wing was
mortally wounded in the line of duty by August Bloom in the Sibley Hotel
(site of the Conoco Station 4th Street West and Bush). Bloom
fired two shots at Chief Daily, one entered his body in the abdomen and the
other in the shoulder. He died of wounds the following day.
Chief Daily was born in Palmyra, Missouri on
February 18, 1863 and was 43 years of age when he died. He came with his
parents to the City of Red Wing when he was a boy. Here he grew up and
attended the public schools. After leaving school he went west and worked in
many of the different cities of the Rock Mountain and Pacific Coast
districts. However, most of his work was in Seattle and Butte. He became a
skilled plasterer and when he returned to Red wing he engaged in the same
business.
When John H. Rich became Mayor, he was
appointed Chief of Police and was re-appointed by Mayor Pierce. He served
in this position for six years.
Chief Daily was married on February 11, 1902
to Mary Dawson, a teacher at the Training School. They had a son, James
Dawson Daily who was born on June 9, 1905. He was a member of St Joseph’s
Catholic Church. He was also a member of several fraternal societies, among
them the Elks, The Knights of Pythias and AOUW.
As Chief of Police, he made an exceptional
and unique record. He was a great large-hearted man, full of that sympathy
that comes from the kindest impulses, and made practical by a wide
experience in meeting all kinds of people. He met men and felt a genuine
interest in the humblest, the poorest and the most unfortunate and the most
unworthy. He saw beneath all the distinctions that are more apparent then
real in human society and endeavored to meet every person with whom he came
in contact as a friend. The qualities bound him closer to the hearts of the
people and it was because of this that Red Wing mourned his loss so
sincerely.
In his last hours he was conscious. All day
before he died, his mind was clear and he met the issue of death with the
same fearlessness with which he had met life. He expressed no malice toward
the man who was the cause of his death; only regretting that life could not
be longer because of the love he bore for his devoted wife and son. In his
dying moments his wife and son were at his bedside and his last wishes were
for them.
Extracted from the Red Wing Daily Republican
Eagle
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