Volume II: Filmography
February 2, 1915 (Tuesday)
Length: 2 reels (1,995 feet)
Character: Drama
Director: Carroll Fleming
Cast: Sidney Bracy, Mignon Anderson, Arthur Ashley, Carey L. Hastings, Morgan Jones, Ethel Jewett, Evelyn Foshay, Samuel Niblack, Jacob Ruskin, Arthur Bauer (Arthur Graves)
Location: Filmed in the courthouse on Lawton Street, New Rochelle.
Note: An expanded story by Karl Schiller, based upon the synopsis, was published in The Motion Picture Magazine, March 1915.
ARTICLE, The New Rochelle Pioneer, December 12, 1914:
"Carroll Fleming had the courtroom on Lawton Street, turned into a 'movie' studio, Thursday, when he took several courtroom scenes of In the Jury Room, featuring Arthur Ashley and Sidney Bracy in male roles and Mignon Anderson and Evelyn Foshay in female roles. Jacob Ruskin had a prominent part."
SYNOPSIS, Reel Life, January 23, 1915:
"Caleb Green, a rich factory owner, is hated by his employees for his cruelty. An able champion of the workers is found in Dr. Middleton, a famous surgeon and earnest toiler for the betterment of industrial conditions. He threatens to expose Green's flagrant violation of the health regulations in the conduct of his factory unless he reforms. However, by chance, Green gets hold of a letter affecting the reputation of Dr. Middleton's daughter, and using this as a trump card, he defies the doctor to do his worst. The surgeon calls at the Green home and tries to obtain the compromising letter. A quarrel ensues, which happens to be witnessed by a servant, and the doctor leaves. An hour later, the factory owner is found dead, and evidence points to Middleton. On the jury, at the trial, is a certain Arthur Graves, a mechanical engineer. He is the one member who votes every time for the doctor's acquittal. At length it comes out who is 'hanging' the jury, and when asked why he believes that the prisoner should go free, Graves tells a remarkable story.
"Many years before, it seems, Dr. Middleton attended the wife of Graves through a critical operation. The crisis was not past, when word came that his own wife lay dying and that his services were required at once. Duty prevailed over love. Middleton saved the wife of the mechanic at the cost of the life of his own wife. The jury turns to the man. Scarcely have they written their verdict 'not guilty,' however, when a court officer appears. 'Gentlemen,' he says, 'the trial is over. The real culprit has confessed.' It is one of Green's employees, who is guilty of his death."
REVIEW, The Morning Telegraph, January 31, 1915:
"Graves hangs the jury in the trail of Doctor Middleton. When he tells his story, the jury returns a verdict of 'not guilty.' Later the real murderer confesses and Dr. Middleton's innocence is established."
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Copyright © 1995 Q. David Bowers. All Rights Reserved.