Thursday, July 31, 2025
Saturday, July 26, 2025
The Madison County Murderer.
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Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, March 28, 1868. |
He returned at around 7:00 that evening, burst into the house, and began verbally abusing the family, especially Eisnagle’s two daughters. William stepped up and confronted Stotler. Their mother held on to Isaac to prevent him from entering the fray. During the scuffle, Stotler drew a pocketknife and stabbed William in the chest four times. The blade penetrated his heart, and he died instantly. Then, pushing Mrs. Eisnagle aside, he grabbed Isaac, threw him on the bed, stabbed and killed him as well.
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Youthful Killers.

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Horrible Murder in Twelfth Street.Alfred Buchanan - age 19.
Mrs. Sarah Shancks was found dead in her millinery store in
New York City on December 7, 1860. She had been brutally beaten and slashed,
her throat cut so deeply she was nearly decapitated. 19-year-old Alfred
Buchanan was indicted for the murder, but before his trial, he was pronounced insane
and committed to the state lunatic asylum. |
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"Girl Slays Girl."Alice Mitchell - Age 19.
Alice Mitchell and her 17-year-old schoolmate, Freda Ward, declared love for each other and planned to elope to St. Louis to live together as
husband and wife. When Freda’s family stopped the relationship, Alice Mitchel
met Freda Ward on the street and cut her throat with a straight razor. |
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Orrin De Wolf.Orrin De Wolf - Age 18. In 1844, Orrin De Wolf boarded at the home of William Stiles in Worcester, Massachusetts. He fell in love with Stiles’s young wife, Eliza Ann. De Wolf strangled Stiles with a silk handkerchief, hoping to steal his landlord’s wife. Instead, he was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. |
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The Murdered Congressman.Thomas Hamilton - age 18. U.S. Congressman Cornelius S. Hamilton returned to
Marysville, Ohio, because his son Thomas was experiencing mental problems. He
was preparing to send Thomas to an asylum, but when he went to the barn for
some feed, Thomas hit him in the back of the head with a fence post, fracturing
his skull and killing him instantly. |
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Another Boy Murderer.In 1883, Francis Kelly, of Rockport, Indiana, decided that
farmwork was not for him. He took a job with a man trading illicit liquor from
a boat. After an argument over his share of the profits, Kelly shot the man in
the head and burned his boat. He was convicted of first-degree murder and
sentenced to life in prison. |
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Shot by Her Stepson.Thomas McCabe - age 16, Thomas McCabe enjoyed life in New York City but did not
like the discipline of school or his parents.
He decided to rob his parents and leave town, and in the process, he shot
and killed his stepmother. McCabe was easily captured and convicted of second-degree
murder. |
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Jesse Pomeroy - "Boston Boy Fiend."Jessie Harding Pomeroy - age 14. In 1874, Jessie Pomeroy of Boston, Massachusetts, murdered 10-year-old Katie Curran and 4-year-old Horace Millen. He had previously assaulted and tortured several other children. Pomeroy was captured and convicted of first-degree murder. He spent the next 53 years in prison. |
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Delia's Gone, One More Round.Moses "Cooney" Houston - age 14. In Savannah, Georgia, on Christmas Eve 1900, the tail end of the 19th Century, Moses “Cooney” Houston shot and killed his 14-year-old girlfriend, Delia Green. The murder of Deila Green was the source of the folk song “Delia’s Gone,” still sung 125 years later. |
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A Boy Murderer.John Wesley Elkins - age 11. Around 2 a.m. on July 24, 1889, John Wesley Elkins went into his parents' room and shot his father in the head with a rifle. Then he beat his mother to death with a club. He did it because he was unhappy about having to take care of his infant half-sister and wanted to go off on his own. Elkins served twelve years of a life sentence for murder. |
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
Saturday, July 12, 2025
Killed With a Cuspidor.
Jerry Shoaff was drinking with a group of young men at Tom
Clarke’s saloon in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the night of October 3, 1888. Eight of
them decided to go next to Goelecke’s Saloon on East Main Street. Someone
proposed that they order drinks there, then leave without paying. They all
agreed to the plan.
They stood at the bar and ordered their drinks. As the men
finished drinking, they began leaving he saloon. William Goelecke, who was
tending the bar, demanded that they pay. Shoaff and his friends, Arthur Hammill
and J.W. Hefflinger, stayed at the bar arguing with Goelecke, who was
threatening them with a seltzer bottle he was holding by the neck.
William Kanning, one of the entourage, was outside smoking a
cigar when he heard a large crash sounding like breaking glass. A moment later,
Jerry Shoaff ran out of the bar saying, “Run boys, I have hit him.” They all
ran down Main Street and turned down a side street.
During the argument inside the saloon, someone picked up an iron spittoon and hurled it at Goelecke. It hit him on the head and then shattered the bar mirror. Goelecke fell to the ground unconscious. His skull was fractured.