Charles Glenn Suttlemyre
b. 10 February 1930, d. 5 March 1994
- Father: Phillip Johnson Suttlemyre b. 3 February 1889, d. 29 February 1960
- Mother: St. Claire Eugenia Sellers b. circa 24 March 1891, d. 12 May 1960
- Charles Glenn Suttlemyre was born on 10 February 1930 in Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina.
- Phillip Johnson Suttlemyre and St. Claire Eugenia Sellers appeared in the US federal census of 1 April 1930 in Hickory, Catawba County, North Carolina, at 1625 Eleventh Avenue. Other members of the household included Charles Glenn Suttlemyre, Phillip Johnson Suttlemyre Jr.
- The following appeared on 29 March 1960 in the Greensboro Daily News: (Hickory, March 28) The will of the late P. Johnson Suttlemyre, Hickory druggist and owner of Hickory Drug Co., has been filed for probate. His estate, valued at $225,000, was left ot his widow and two sons, Charles G. and Phillip J. Suttlemyre.
- The following appeared on 14 May 1960 in the Greensboro Daily News: (Hickory, May 13) Lawyers for Charles Glenn Suttlemyre moved today to have the high-strung 30-year-old son of a former Hickory mayor committed for mental observation after police said he admitted the fatal bludgeoning of his aged mother with a souvenir tomahawk.
Police Lt. C. S. Teague said Suttlemyre readily admitted the attack on his mother, Mrs. Claire Suttlemyre, about 70, in the family's rambling white frame home Thursday.
Suttlemyre, who has a recent history of mental illness, showed no remorse over the savage tomahawk attack, Lt. Teague said. The incident ended after Suttlemyre lifted his mother's battered body in his arms, carried her to a downstairs bedroom, and then telephoned Dr. A. C. Barnes who found the body at 5:30 p.m. when he arrived an hour later at the home in a prominent residential district.
Lt. Teague and Cornoer W. E. Bass reconstructed this version:
Suttlemyre, known to be a religious fanatic, and his mother began arguing upstairs over a Bible. Suttlemyre seized the tomahawk from a souvenir collection, and struck his mother a glancing blow on the shoulder. The terrified woman ran downstairs and into the dining room with her son at her heels. Scratches on her son's neck indicated to officers that the woman fought frantically for her life.
In the blood-smeared dining room, Suttlemyre smashed his mother in the head three times with the tomahawk. Then he carried her to the downstairs bedroom and telephoned Dr. Barns.
Mrs. Suttlemyre was the widow of Phillip Johnson Suttlemyre, prominent Hickory druggist who at one time was president of the North Carolina Pharmaceutical Association. He served two one-year terms as Hickory's mayor, in 1937 and 1938.
An older son, Phillip, is confined to a mental institution.
Suttlemyre attended Oak Ridge Military Institute, Lenoir Rhyne College and North Carolina State, which he left in 1952 because of scholastic difficulties after one year. He also was an Air Force veteran.
He apparently never had worked and lived at home with his mother. He had submitted to treatment for mental ills in recent years and only Friday returned from Duke Hospital where he had gone voluntarily for treatment. - The following appeared on 15 May 1960 in the Greensboro Daily News: (Hickory, May 14) The son of a former Hickory mayor, 30-year-old Charles Glenn Suttlemyre who is charged with the tomahawk slaying of his aged mother, was taken to the state mental hospital in Raleigh today to begin a 30-day period of observation.
Commitment orders were signed by Superior Court Judge J. Frank Huskins on the basis of police and family affidavits.
Police said Suttlemyre, who has a recent history of mental illness, admitted attacking Mrs. Claire Suttlemyre, about 70, at the family's home here Thursday. She is the widow of Phillip Johnson Suttlemyre, Hickory's mayor in the late 1930s.
Officers said the slaying came after the son and the mother argued over a Bible and Suttlemyre seized a tomahawk in a souvenir collection, striking her three times in the head. - The following appeared on 19 December 1960 in the Greensboro Daily News: (Newton, Dec. 18) Superior Court Judge George Patton of Franklin has signed an order directing that Charles Glenn Suttlemyre of Hickory is entitled to inherit under his mother's will.
Judge Patton concluded as a matter law that Suttlemyre was not legally responsible for the death of his mother because of insanity at the time.
The mother, Mrs. Johnson Suttlemyre, died last May 12, allegedly from injuries suffered at the hands of her son.
Suttlemyre and a brother, Phillip J. Suttlemyre, have been ruled incompetents and are confined to an institution.
Nevertheless, the sons will share the mother's estate, including $250,000 left her by her husband, Johnson Suttlemyre, who died last Feb. 20, and $64,000 she had held in her own right.
Two Hickory lawyers are guardians for the Suttlemyre brothers. - Charles Glenn Suttlemyre died on 5 March 1994 at age 64 in Newton, Catawba County, North Caroilina.
- He was interred at Oakwood Cemetery, Hickory, Catawba County, South Carolina.
- Last Edited: 12 Apr 2016