|
“A dark, mean little bedroom, a woman, half-undressed, dirty and pale, and blear-eyed from long excesses, a male companion, leaning over her with a revolver at her head, two shots, a shriek, an ugly hole under the ear, and the vice and crime of Boston had added another murder to its long score.” - The Boston Herald’s vivid description of the murder of Josephine Brown on Christmas Eve, 1891. |
|
It was Santa Claus' Fault.On Christmas Eve, 1889, chaos ensued at a Shawneetown, Illinois, Christmas party, when the tags fell off some of the presents and were replaced haphazardly. The room erupted into a free fight with chairs, clubs, knives, and pistols. it looked as though several combatants would be killed, but none of the wounds proved fatal. A Christmas miracle. |
|
Mrs. Southern's Sad Case.At a Pickens County, Georgia Christmas party in 1876, Kate Southern warned her husband not to dance with his mistress, Narcissa Cowan, and she warned Narcissa to stay away from her husband. When they danced together anyway Kate borrowed her father's pocketknife and plunged it into Narcissa's chest. |
|
That Bad Man Stagolee.Troubadours have sung the story of Stagolee for over a hundred years. Each singer seems to know a different version and tell a different story of its origin. But the story is true. The legend was born when Stack Lee Shelton shot Billy Lyons, in a fight over a Stetson hat, in Bill Curtis's Saloon, on Christmas night 1895. |
|
Delia's Gone, One More Round.On Christmas Eve 1900, Cooney Houston shot and killed Delia Green. If that isn’t tragic enough, they were both 14 years old. Their sad story would have been long forgotten, even in Yamacraw – the black neighborhood in the western end of Savannah, Georgia, where the killing took place – if it hadn’t been for a song. The ballad of Delia’s murder traveled from Georgia to the Bahamas, then back to the States during the folk boom of the 1950s. |
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Murderous Christmas Celebrations.
Murder never pauses for Christmas; it is all too often an unwelcome guest at Yuletide parties.
Here are a few murderous nineteenth-century American Christmas "celebrations."





No comments:
Post a Comment