The crowd stood in complete silence.
No cheering.
No shouting.
Only the creaking of the wooden platform beneath two people who had once promised to spend their lives together.
Husband and wife.
Standing side by side.
Facing the same fate.
Then, just moments before the black hoods were lowered, Elizabeth and Josiah Potts turned toward one another and shared a final kiss.
What happened next would cement their place in one of the most unsettling stories of the American frontier.
But the mystery that brought them to that gallows remains controversial even today.
A Story That Began With a Letter
Years before their names filled newspaper headlines, the Potts family appeared ordinary.
They lived in Carlin, Nevada, where Josiah worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad.
To neighbors, they seemed like a typical frontier family trying to build a life in the American West.
But behind closed doors, a secret was growing.
Elizabeth had begun exchanging letters with a man named Miles Fawcett through a matrimonial agency.
In the late 1800s, these agencies connected lonely men and women across vast distances, often leading to friendships, courtships, and sometimes much more.
What began as correspondence eventually led Fawcett to move closer to the Potts family.
For a period, he even lived under their roof.
Then, one day, he disappeared.
The Man Who Vanished Without a Trace
On January 5, 1888, Miles Fawcett entered the Potts residence.
After that, nobody seemed to know what happened to him.
Days passed.
Then weeks.
Then months.