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| (New York Journal, August 5, 1896) |
Annie Bock and her husband, Jacob, were spending the summer at Rockaway Beach in Queens, New York. On Sunday, August 1, 1896, Annie went back to their flat at 207 E. 21st Street in Manhattan’s East Side to pay their monthly rent. She had $300 in the Dry Dock Savings Bank, and on Monday morning, she withdrew $50 and paid $20 rent. Her plan was to return to Rockaway that afternoon, but instead, she went to Coney Island, possibly accompanied by a man. “At 9:00 she was on 14th Street,” said the New York Journal, “the pavements of which she knew well.”
Her movements were observed by others who knew the pavements well. Rosa Schwartz saw Annie stop and converse with a man, 5’ 6”, slender, graying hair, wearing a black frock coat and a straw hat. They walked to 3rd Avenue and took a cable car uptown. Hattie Stein and Lillie Field saw them alight from the car on 21st Street and enter No. 207 together. Mamie Freidman saw them leave the house about 20 minutes later. At about 12:30, Mrs. Feltner, who had a view of the entrance to 207 from her window, saw Annie return to the house with another man, of medium build, with a swarthy complexion and a black mustache. This was the last time Annie Bock was seen alive by anyone but her killer.
Rosa Reichman, the Bocks' servant, heard them moving about, but she was nearly deaf, and after they closed the bedroom door, she heard nothing. The next morning, Rosa opened the door, and the first thing she noticed was that the canary usually singing in the bedroom was lying dead in the cage, its wing torn off. Then she saw her mistress, lying half on the bed, her head in a pool of blood. She ran from the room and through the hallway until she found a janitor, who notified the police.
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| (New York Journal, August 5, 1896) |
Jacob Bock was notified of his wife’s death by telegraph. He arrived around 5:00, looked at the bloody sheets, and broke down crying. He later told police that he could not think of anyone who would want to murder his wife. He claimed that he never knew her to be unfaithful and did not know she had an account at the Dry Dock Savings Bank.
Jacob Bock and Annie Brafman were both Polish immigrants who had known each other as children in Warsaw. They were married by a rabbi in New York, four years before the murder. Jacob was a cigar maker who was often unemployed. Annie was the money maker, working as a waitress in cafes on the East Side. She was petite and, at one time, was considered one of the prettiest in that profession. By 1896, she was frail and dissipated, weighing less than 100 pounds.
On Wednesday, the police arrested Mortimer Golden, a pawnbroker who matched the description of the last man Annie had been with. Rosa Schwartz, a close friend of Annie’s, told the police Golden had once threatened Annie. Golden admitted he knew Annie Bock but said he was in Atlantic City on Monday night. He had two Empire Theatre tickets to prove he had attended an opera there. The alibi was solid, and after spending a night in jail, Mort Golden was released.
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| (New York World, August 7, 1896) |
Levy told Captain O’Brien that on Monday night, he was on the corner of Broadway and Chambers Street, where he met Policeman Corrigan and was with him until midnight. Corrigan corroborated his story, but Levy’s mother and brother said he was home with them both Sunday and Monday nights.
The stains on Levy’s knife turned out to be tobacco juice, not blood. There was no blood under his fingernails, and the police concluded he had not shaved his mustache to hide his identity. Levy was not a murderer, just a lying braggart.
Concerning
the story told by his family, Levy said, “They were trying to help me, but they
came very near to sending me to the electric chair.”
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| (New York World, August 11, 1896) |
This is a strange case—a remarkable case. I may say that there have been 113 men at work upon it constantly, for each officer of this command had been instructed to keep a sharp lookout for persons resembling the “swarthy man” seen with Annie Bock by Rosa Schwartz. The most astute detectives in the department have been indefatigable. There are certain features in this mystery which make it difficult of solution. She knew many men, and this fact made it a matter of no particular notice when she was seen walking with a man or even taking one to her home.
This is one theory, the maniac theory is only borne out by the savage attack made upon the canary bird, and yet this theory loses force because there was no mutilation of the body, as it seems not unlikely would have been the case were she slain by a victim of homicidal mania. As to the theory of an enemy of long standing, I prefer not to discuss that.
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| (Pontiac Daily Leader, September 19, 1896) |
Sources:
“"Nigger Jake" Discharged,” Sun., August 8, 1896.
“An Arrest in the Bock Case,” New-York Tribune, August 7, 1896.
“An Outcast Woman Murdered,” The New York Times, August 5, 1896.
“Another Annie Bock Suspect,” The World, August 11, 1896.
“Another Block Murder Suspect,” Evening Post, August 10, 1896.
“Another Bock Suspect arrested,” New-York Tribune, August 9, 1896.
“Arrest in the Bock Case,” New York Herald, August 7, 1896.
“Dangenstein Discharged, Too,” New-York Tribune, August 12, 1896.
“Levy's Wagging tongue,” The World, August 7, 1896.
“Mrs. Bock buried,” New York Herald, August 6, 1896.
“Murder a Mystery Yet,” The World, August 6, 1896.
“The Murdered Woman Buried,” New-York Tribune, August 6, 1896.
“Mysterious Murder,” Evening Journal, August 4, 1896.
“New York City Police Have Solved the Bock Mystery,” Pontiac Daily Leader, September 19, 1896.
“Not an Assassin, but a Lying Braggart,” New York Journal, August 8, 1896.
“Police Views in Recent Crimes,” New-York Tribune, September 5, 1896.
“Slain in Her Bed by an Unknown,” New York Journal, August 5, 1896.
“Strange Trio of Criminal Mysteries,” New York Journal, August 11, 1896.
“The Strangler's Victims - All Women.,” New York Journal and Advertiser, May 14, 1897.
“Telegraphic Brevities,” Alexandria Gazette, August 4, 1896.
“Who Killed Mrs. Bock?,” Sun., August 5, 1896.
“With Her Throat Cut,” Evening Bulletin, August 4, 1896.
“With Her Throat Cut,” The World, August 5, 1896.






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1 comments :
April 25, 2026 at 12:09 PM
Good one Bob...
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