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| New York Evening Journal, March 18, 1898. |
Two officers responded, and she took them up to her apartment. When they saw the body, they arrested Helen and took her to the 67th Street Police Station for questioning. Captain Strause dispatched two detectives to investigate the scene.
The women were very poor. Their three-room apartment was sparsely furnished, and the bed they shared was just a mattress atop some wooden boxes. There were no signs of violence in the rooms. A search of the apartment produced a man’s white handkerchief with the monogram, “B.R.,” a slip of paper with an address in Hawley, Pennsylvania. Handwritten on a card were the words, “After suffering, Relieve. Dead. Amen.” suggesting to the detectives that Minnie had committed suicide.
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| New York Herald, June 1, 1894. |
They abandoned the suicide theory after the coroner examined the body. The handkerchief was tied so tightly that it dug into the flesh. A strong hand had tied the knot. A bruise on her wrist indicated that she was held in a tight grasp, and a bruise around her eye was caused by a blow and not by strangulation. Since there were no signs of struggle, the detectives believed Minnie had been knocked unconscious before she was strangled. She was taken by surprise by someone she knew.
The other residents of the building told the detectives that many men, too well-dressed for that part of town, visited the women at all hours of the day and night. They would sometimes ask for Mrs. Lang, the name that Minnie and Helen put on their door.
Helen Kahlert was a German immigrant who spoke little English. Through an interpreter, she told them she was 30 years old and had been in America for one year. Minnie Weldt, 21, was also German and had been in the country for three years. They met in Princeton, New Jersey, in January and moved into the apartment on 61st Street three weeks earlier. Both worked as washerwomen in other people's homes, as well as taking in laundry. They placed advertisements in German and English newspapers for gentlemen’s washing. The ads were signed “Mrs. Lang,” because they did not want to publish their real names.
Helen told the police that no men ever called on Minnie; she had a lover in Germany. Minnie had recently received some money from relatives in Germany and set aside $20, saving to bring her lover to America. The police found no trace of the money and now believed the motive for the murder was robbery.
Mrs. Boese, who lived with her granddaughter in the flat across the hall, kept tabs on people coming and going. She said that around 10:00, Wednesday morning, she heard someone knock on the women’s door. She saw a tall, stout man, dressed in black, wearing a derby hat. His skin was pale, but she could not see his face. He knocked only once, and Minnie let him in. About half an hour later, she and her granddaughter heard him leave the flat. As he passed down the hall, they heard him laughing to himself.
Around 11:00, another man called at the flat, but after knocking several times and receiving no answer, he went away. A third man called between 2:00 and 3:00 with the same result. It seemed likely that the first caller had been the killer. The laughter that Mrs. Boese and her granddaughter heard caused the New York Herald to opine, “It is possible that the man was a maniac, who was pleased at the thought of the deed he had just committed.”
The theory that robbery was the motive was shattered when the missing $20 was found. Helen stayed in Mrs. Boese’s flat the night she found the body. She brought along a small handbag, which she left behind when the police took her to the station. Inside was a balled-up pair of stockings. In the toe of one of them was a $5 gold piece and $15 in paper money.
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| New York Herald, June 1, 1894. |
Helen told them that Minnie left a trunk with Mrs. Koerner, who ran a servant girls’ boardinghouse on East 50th Street. The detectives interviewed Mrs. Koerner, who told them Minnie knew several men whom Helen failed to mention: Louis Horn of Park Row; William Strelow, a farmer from Mount Vernon; and Emil Bortis, a Hoboken streetcar conductor.
Louis Horn said he met Minnie in a saloon one night and thereafter paid her bills and helped her along. He eventually tired of this arrangement and broke it off. Strelow took Minnie out several times, but she did not like him. She wrote and told him not to call again. Emil Bortis called often in his conductor’s uniform. He induced Minnie to live with him and serve as his wife's housekeeper. This lasted three days. She returned to Mrs. Koerner, saying she hated Bortis and would never see him again. Bortis had a solid alibi, and the other two men were not considered suspects in the murder.
On June 2, the police arrested Paul Jacobi on suspicion of murder. There was very little direct evidence to suspect Jacobi, but he fit the description, being a large, fleshy man, and he told conflicting stories. On the day of the murder, he visited a certain liquor shop and got a drink on credit, having no money. He said he was going to Staten Island, where he expected to get work. Shortly after noon, he returned to the same saloon and said he had not gone to Staten Island. A messenger informed him that his wife had just given birth. He seemed to have a large amount of cash and bought drinks for everyone.
When he was seen the following day, he had shaved off the mustache he had worn for years. He told three different stories as to why: he had singed it badly while lighting an alcohol lamp, he shaved it to apply for a job as a waiter in a hotel, and he told police he always shaved it off in the summer.
The police asked where he had spent Wednesday morning, and he said he had visited an old girlfriend named Gretchin Hirsch. She confirmed that he had been to her house that morning and said he had sent her out for beer several times. During one of these trips, he stole $19 from her pocketbook.
The police would not say whether Jacobi knew the dead girl or not, but intimated that they had some strong links in a chain of evidence. During his arraignment, Gretchen Hirsch testified that he was with her between 9:30 and noon. Mrs. Boese and her granddaughter, who had sworn positively that they could identify the man who had entered Minnie’s room on Wednesday, both looked at Jacobi and said he was certainly not the man. Jacobi was released but later rearrested on larceny charges preferred by Gretchen Hirsch.
The police were completely at sea; they had no more leads to follow. Minnie Weldt was buried in Potter’s Field. The coroner’s jury ruled that Minnie was “murdered by a person or persons unknown.” The case remained unsolved.
The New York Sun said, “It seems now that the murderer must either have been someone with a mind perverted like that of Jack the Ripper or a man who had some special object of revenge.” Two years later, a series of unsolved strangulation murders plagued the neighborhood where Minnie Weldt was killed. New York City newspapers speculated that one mad strangler committed them all and that Minnie Weldt had been his first victim.
Sources:
“Arrest in the Weldt Murder Case,” The New York Times, June 3, 1894.
“Charged with Minnie Weidt's Death,” Buffalo Evening News, June 4, 1894.
“Found Strangled to Death,” New-York Tribune, May 31, 1894.
“Have Another Clue,” Evening World, June 1, 1894.
“He Knew Minnie Weldt,” Evening World, June 2, 1894.
“Is He The Murderer?” New-York Tribune, June 4, 1894.
“Is There a 'Jack the Strangler' Abroad,” journal, June 21, 1896.
“Jacobi Proves An Alibi,” New-York Tribune, June 5, 1894.
“Little Doubt That It Was Murder,” New-York Tribune, June 1, 1894.
“Minnie Weldt Murdered,” The Evening World, May 31, 1894.
“Mrs. Weldt Killed,” The New York Herald, June 1, 1894.
“The Murder of Minna Weldt,” Sun., June 2, 1894.
“News Article,” Buffalo Evening News, November 21, 1894.
“New-York City,” New-York Tribune, June 29, 1894.
“Strangled With a Handkerchief,” The New York Times, May 31, 1894.
“The Strangler,” Buffalo Evening News, March 16, 1896.
“Wept Over the Photograph,” Evening World, June 2, 1894.




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1 comments :
April 11, 2026 at 10:46 AM
Good article, Bob!
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