Saturday, August 2, 2025
Saturday, June 14, 2025
The Acquital of Joseph A. Blair.
Later that night, Blair returned to the stable with a pistol in his pocket. They argued again, and Blair followed Armstrong when he went up to his room above the stable. Two minutes later, a gunshot was heard, and Armstrong was dead.
A coroner’s jury charged Blair with manslaughter. However, after 2,000 workingmen held a rally protesting the light charge against Blair for killing one of their peers, the prosecution, led by the New Jersey Attorney General, raised the charge to first-degree murder.
Joseph Blair’s trial lasted seventeen days, with three days of impassioned closing arguments for and against his conviction of first-degree murder. When the jury returned a verdict of not guilty, Blair appeared utterly dazed for a moment, then fell over the pile of law books on the table and sobbed loudly.
Read the full story here: The Murdered Coachman.
Illustration from Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, November 8, 1879.
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Life, Crimes, and Conviction of Lydia Sherman.
When the press learned that Lydia Sherman had poisoned three husbands and eight children, they called her “The Arch Murderess of Connecticut,” “The Modern Borgia,” and “The Poison Fiend.”
Read the full story here: The Poison Fiend.
Saturday, April 26, 2025
Views of the Fisk Assassination.
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1. Life, Adventures, Strange Career and Assassination of Col. James Fisk Jr. (Philadelphia: Barclay and Co, 1872.)
2. Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, January 20, 1872.
3. The Life of James Fisk Jr. (Philadelphia: Union Publishing Company, 1872.)
4. “The Stokes-Fisk Assassination,” Illustrated Police News, January 11, 1872.
Saturday, April 19, 2025
Liquor and Free Love.
As Police Officers Henry Johnson and Eli Veazie were leaving
the Chelsea, Massachusetts City Marshal’s office on the evening of February 17,
1872, they were approached by a man, intoxicated and in a state of agitation.
“I have had my revenge. I want you to go with me,” he said, “I suppose I have killed him and shall have to suffer for it.”
Saturday, February 8, 2025
Innocent Man in a Felon's Cell.
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Charley and Mary.
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Charley McGill and Mary Kelly. |
In 1874, Charley McGill saw Mary Kelly on the street in Columbus,
Ohio. He struck up an acquaintance with Mary that soon turned into “desperate
infatuated love.” They traveled together throughout Ohio, and although not
married, they lived together as man and wife.
Mary was a virtuous girl before meeting Charley, but
reportedly, in Cleveland, they lived off Mary’s earnings as a prostitute. After
an angry quarrel, Mary moved out. Charley searched for four weeks before finding Mary living in a Cleveland brothel. She invited him to her room, and as they lay
together in bed, he pulled out his revolver and shot her in the head.
At his murder trial, Charley McGill pleaded not guilty by
reason of insanity, but the jury did not buy it. He successfully
appealed the verdict and was retried but found guilty again. McGill was
hanged in Cleveland on February 13, 1879.
Saturday, December 28, 2024
Blue-Eyed Executions.
It was a foolproof plan. Six men in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, bought insurance policies on the life of Joseph Raber, an elderly recluse living in a hut in the Blue Mountains. They were sure Raber would pass away soon and end their financial problems, but when he took too long to die, they helped him along. At their murder trial, reporters noticed that the killers all had one common trait and branded them “The Blue-Eyed Six.”
Two of the six, Franklin Stichler and Charles Drews, were hanged on November 14, 1879:
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Illustrated Police News, Oct. 18, 1879 |
Henry Wise, Isreal Brandt, and Josiah Hummel were hanged on May 13, 1880:
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Illustrated Police News, May 29, 1880. |
The last of the six, George Zechman, was found not guilty on appeal. He was an insurance investor, not a party to the conspiracy.
Read the full story here: The Blue Eyed Six.
Saturday, December 21, 2024
A Christmas Party Murder.
Saturday, December 7, 2024
The Merrihew Murder.
Charles B. Merrihew became violently ill in May 1879 at his home in Lowville, New York, and was being nursed by his wife, Harriet. They sent for his physician, Dr. Turner, and while waiting for his arrival, Harriet confessed to Charles that she had been poisoning him. Though she refused to repeat her confession to Dr. Thomas, he quickly confirmed that Charles had taken poison. He was able to induce vomiting and save Charles's life.
The marriage was not a happy one. It was alleged that Charles was having an adulterous relationship with Maria Sheldon. Harriet also had a lover outside of her marriage.
The poisoning incident raised questions about the death of Charles’s brother David two months earlier. David, who was living with Charles and Harriet, suddenly became violently ill and died in their house. At the time, congestion of the lungs was given as the cause of death. After the attempted poisoning of Charles, the authorities exhumed David’s body and performed a thorough post-mortem examination. Doctors determined that David had died of arsenic poisoning. After a coroner’s inquest, Harriet Merrihew was charged with the murder of David Merrihew. She was arrested and taken to jail in Lowville.
Saturday, November 2, 2024
"The Boy Murderer."
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Myron Buel. “He possesses an expressionless and almost idiotic countenance.” Illustrated Police News. |
Buel continued to
profess innocence while his attorneys appealed the verdict. His motion for a new
trial was denied, and the governor refused to grant a reprieve. Three days
before his execution, Buel confessed. He was in love with Catherine, the 14-year-old
daughter of his employer. Her rejections angered him so much that he lured Catherine
into the barn and then threw a rope around her neck. He beat her to death with
a milking stool, then ravished her.
Myron Buel was hanged on November 14, 1879.
Read the full story here: The Confessions of Myron Buel.
Saturday, October 26, 2024
The Stull-Best Murder.
The prime
suspect in Amy Best’s murder quickly became Mrs. Catherine Stull. Though Amy
Best was a 60-year-old widowed grandmother, Mrs. Stull believed she had been
having intimate relations with her husband, John Stull, for the past fifteen
years. Because of her husband’s infidelity, Mrs. Stull “had endured discord at
home and scandal abroad.” She had openly declared that if she ever caught them
together, she would kill them both.
Saturday, October 19, 2024
Poisoning Mania.
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Elizabeth Wharton, in custody, en route to trial in Annapolis. |
Saturday, October 12, 2024
The Confessions of Edward Tatro.
Charles
had to go to Highgate Centre on June 6, 1876, and he asked Alice to join him.
She declined, saying she felt ill and planned to go to bed. Charles’s father was
away visiting friends that evening, so Tatro said he would stay and take care
of Alice. Charles left home at about 7:00.
He
returned at about 10:00 and put his horse in the barn. As he approached the house,
he was surprised to see no lights. Charles entered the dark kitchen, and as he looked
for a match, he stumbled over something lying on the floor. He was shocked to
see what it was.
“He
lighted the match, and there met his sight the lifeless remains of his lovely
wife in a pool of blood, in the most mutilated condition,” said the St. Albans
Daily Messenger, “her head beaten almost to a pumice, and her brains oozing out
on to the floor.”
Saturday, October 5, 2024
Ann and John.
Saturday, September 28, 2024
A Mysterious Tragedy.
Dr. Henry Clark of Boston was summoned to 11 Hamilton Place at around 7:00 the morning of December 30, 1879. A woman had been shot and needed urgent care. When he got there, she was nearly gone, and there was nothing he could do.
A policeman and a medical examiner arrived soon after and determined that the woman, Mrs. Helen J. Ward, had been shot twice in the head. One shot entered her temple and went through her head, the other fractured her skull without entering.
Her 18-year-old daughter, also named Helen, did her best to explain what happened. Mother and daughter shared a bed. They worried about burglars, so they kept a revolver on a chair beside the bed. Miss Ward believed she had been in a somnambulant state and fired at a moving object that she thought was a burglar. Alternatively, she thought the gun may have discharged accidentally. This took place around 4:00 am, raising the question of why she didn’t contact someone sooner. Miss Ward was considered cold and unfeeling because she did not seem overly affected by her mother’s death.
Saturday, August 24, 2024
A Youthful Murderer.
Later that day, Kildorf’s body was discovered, and the
authorities tracked Wilbur to his father’s house. They arrested him and brought
him before Esquire Simpson. Wilbur waived examination and was committed to
jail.
George Wilbur was from a good family and was “respectably connected.”
Michael Kildorf was a stranger in North Plains, living with his aunt, Mrs.
Burke.
The public sentiment in North Plains was overwhelmingly in
Wilbur’s favor. A correspondent who did not share the “maudlin sympathy for
murderers” commented sarcastically:
Now is the time to commence sympathy for poor Wilbur. Oh! he must be in jail! How unpleasant it must be when Kildorf is so comfortable underground, below the frost. Will poor Wilbur have to be tried? He ought not to be, for he must have been insane—poor fellow. Oh, how easy he whipped out that pistol and drove that bullet into the back of Kildorf's bead! He must have been ready at any time—poor fellow. And then if he had missed Kildorf's head how bad he would have felt. I hope he won't have to be tried. Can't we get him out on low bail, and then let him off—it will be so unpleasant for him to stay in jail and then be tried? And then if we had hanging for murder, how bad the poor fellow would feel when they put the rope round his neck. And then if he should be ten or fifteen minutes in dying, when he slipped Kildorf off in about one minute, and so easy. And then to be hung up and not touch the ground! Oh! horrible! Oh, the poor fellow! He will go straight to Heaven, of course.
It does not appear that George Wilbur was ever tried or
sentenced for the murder.
Sources:
“A Deliberate Young Murderer,” Illustrated Police News, February 15, 1879.
“A Youthful Murderer,” Detroit Free Press, January 30, 1879.
“A Youthful Murderer,” The Inter Ocean, January 30, 1879.
Saturday, August 10, 2024
The Norwich Poisoning.
Cobb’s friends and neighbors believed he was murdered, and they had a ready suspect. Wesley W. Bishop was having an affair with Cobb’s wife, Kate, and they were not very discreet. Bishop had purchased arsenic, which he said he had given to Cobb, and Bishop’s wife had died four months earlier under similar circumstances.
Saturday, July 20, 2024
The Montville Tragedy.
On Saturday, January 25, 1879, George Rowell returned home to Montville, Maine, from a trip to Bath, eighteen miles away. He lived in the house owned by John and Salina McFarland, a married couple in their seventies. Rowell, 40, married their son’s widowed wife, Abby, who had a 14-year-daughter, Cora McFarland. She also had an infant son with Rowell. All six lived together in the Montville farmhouse.
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George W. Rowell. |
“Why, George,” said Abby, “what are you up for?”
“I do not like to sleep alone,” said George, “I want a woman with me.”
He grabbed Cora then and tried to carry the struggling young girl into the bedroom. He told her to be quiet, he wouldn’t hurt her and said their child would be an angel. Rowell carried her into the bedroom, but John McFarland put his foot in the door to prevent it from closing. Rowell dropped Cora, knocked down McFarland, and went for his rifle. Abby and Cora grabbed the baby and ran outside to the house of a neighbor, Alonzo Raynes. John and Salina McFarland followed them.
Saturday, July 13, 2024
The Murdered Child.
On May 23, 1875, Thomas W. Piper lured five-year-old Mabel
Young to the belfry of the Warren Avenue Baptist Church on the pretext of
viewing pigeons. There he beat her to death with a cricket bat, then escaped by
leaping from the belfry window.
Read the full story here: The Boston Belfry Tragedy.