On March 20, 1898 at approximately 11:00 a.m., Deputy Sheriff Homer Gilmore was involved in an altercation with Ashley Cocke, a prominent yet rather tough character in the middle of a busy Senatobia, Mississippi street. After cursing one another repeatedly, Deputy Gilmore and Ashley Cocke drew their respective weapons and fired. Cocke hit Gilmore three times leaving him incapacitated. Sheriff William Franklin Bray rushed to the scene and demanded that Cocke surrender. Naturally, Ashley Cocke refused and Sheriff Bray fired two shots that missed Cocke. At that point, Ashley Cocke fired five shots and the brave sheriff fell dying instantly. Cocke got on his horse and escaped. He spent the next four days hiding out until he finally voluntarily surrendered.
At the preliminary trial, the defense requested a change of venue and it was granted. The trial of Ashley Cocke was held in Hernando, Mississippi. It lasted 10 days. The state attempted to prove that Sheriff Bray was attempting to arrest Cocke after he had shot Deputy Gilmore. However the theory of the defense was very different. The defense went as far as to assert that Bray and Gilmore were conspiring to kill Ashley Cocke. The claim was made that the sheriff came upon Cocke with his pistol drawn and fired first. To which, Ashley Cocke claimed that he shot the sheriff in self-defense. Much to surprise of everyone involved, Ashley Cocke was subsequently acquitted of the charge of murdering Sheriff Bray. Yet another senseless murder that went unpunished.
Respect and Restore: Sheriff Bray
I found Sheriff Bray’s grave in my husband’s family plots at Bethesda Cemetery. I believe that my husband’s Great-Great-Great Grandfather, P.M.B. Wait, gave this piece of land for his dear friend and former Chief Deputy. P.M.B. Wait was the Tate County Sheriff from 1882 – 1896.
Sheriff Bray’s monument will eventually be amazing. I started my work on this monument with D2 Biological Solution on April 30, 2020. I can not wait to see the final results.
