Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Francine Hughes

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Francine Hughes


Black and white photo of Francine Hughes with short hair, wearing earrings and a necklace.

Children
  
Christy Hughes, Jimmy Hughes, Dana Hughes, Nicole Hughes

Similar
  
John and Lorena Bobbitt, Lin and Xie case, Lissette Ochoa domestic violence case

Francine hughes


Francine Moran Hughes (later Wilson; August 17, 1947 – March 22, 2017) was an American woman who, after 13 years of domestic abuse, set fire to the bed of her live-in ex-husband Mickey Hughes, on March 9, 1977, in Dansville, Michigan. Mickey was killed and the house destroyed in the resulting fire. At trial, Hughes was found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity in one of the first cases involving "battered-woman syndrome" as a defense.

Contents

Francine Hughes with long black hair and with sunglasses on top of her hair and with microphones in front of her.

Francine hughes wilson abused michigan wife who inspired the burning bed dies at 69


Early life

Black and white photo of Francine Hughes with short hair, wearing earrings and a necklace.

Hughes was born in Stockbridge, Michigan. Her mother named her Francine after a French musician. Her father, a farmworker, was an abusive alcoholic. Her mother, she later said, told her that "you did what was best for your husband." At age 16, Francine left high school to marry James "Mickey" Hughes. They had four children.

Abuse

Although she had moved out after their divorce was finalized in April 1971, Mickey had moved back in with her after he was involved in a serious car accident that summer. Francine later testified in court that although she was reluctant to have him return to the home, she felt she could not refuse as she did not want to "hurt him more...than he already had been", referring to the severity of his injuries from the accident.

Black and white photo of Francine Hughes with short hair, wearing earrings.

The abuse persisted and escalated in the years after Mickey's recovery, and he regularly beat her, destroyed furniture and murdered his daughter's kitten. Francine felt that she could not remove Mickey from the home or move out herself, fearing that he would kill her. She obtained her GED and, in 1976, enrolled in a secretarial course in an effort to retain some independence.

Crime and trial

Black and white photo of Francine Hughes with short hair, wearing a necklace.

On the day of the fire, March 9, 1977, Francine returned from her secretarial course in the afternoon and found Mickey intoxicated and irate. He refused to allow her to make food for their four children, and berated her for some time about quitting school, which she refused to agree to, even after Mickey forced her to burn her schoolbooks. He began to physically assault her. The police attended and spoke to the pair, but left after refusing to arrest Mickey as he had not assaulted her in front of them. However, a police officer would later testify that Hughes had warned her that "it was all over" for her because she had called the police.

Francine Hughes sitting in a hospital bed, wearing a green hospital gown with a young boy in front of her wearing a blue and white shirt while holding a hotdog inside the hospital.

Francine again attempted to make dinner for herself and the children, but Mickey became irate and swept the food onto the ground. He forced Francine to the ground by bending her arm behind her back and made her clean the mess with her hands. When she was finished, he dumped out the trash can on the floor and forced her to clean it again. Finally, he forced her to agree to quit secretarial school and burn her textbooks.

A woman sitting on the ground with a little girl holding a placard saying, "Drop all charges against Francine Hughes".

Francine then made Mickey dinner. After eating, he fell asleep in his bed. Some hours passed, during which Francine debated leaving with the children. However, she decided to wait for her youngest child Dana to return home. When he did not return after some time, Francine decided to burn the house down to prevent her from returning to her life with Mickey again.

She told the three children that to put on their coats and wait in the car. She then poured gasoline around Mickey's bed and lit the gasoline on fire. The resulting fire consumed the home. In the meantime, with her children in the car, Francine drove to the police station so she could confess to the killing.

After a trial in Lansing, Michigan, Francine was found not guilty by reason of temporary insanity. Both the prosecution and the defense agreed that Francine's plight was sympathetic. However, no jurors have ever confirmed publicly whether that was a factor in their decision. The concept of jury nullification may apply here.

Later years

In 1980, Hughes married Robert Wilson, a country musician, and became a nurse. She was an LPN and worked at several nursing homes. After retiring, she sat with the elderly and taught a nursing class. She died in Leighton, Alabama, on March 22, 2017, from complications of pneumonia that she developed in late 2016. She was 69.

Cultural impact

Hughes' story was made into a book and a subsequent film in 1984 titled The Burning Bed starring Farrah Fawcett. According to National Public Radio as broadcast on 4/3/17 the song "Independence Day" written by Gretchen Peters and made popular by Martina McBride is about this event.

Folk singer Lyn Hardy also created a song about these events entitled "The Ballad of Francine Hughes".

References

Francine Hughes Wikipedia