Tag: 1900-1919
Freshman Hazing Ends in Death, 1918
Re-posted From: New Albany Evening Tribune, Sept. 14, 1918, page 1. Raleigh, N.C. Sept. 14, 1918 —Upon the charge of murder, four terror stricken youths stood defendants in court, the result of the hazing of Isaac William Rand, Bon of a prominent lumberman of Smithfleld, North Carolina. The accused are sophomores at the University of […]
Posted: September 13th, 2013 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: 1900-1919, bizarre, Juvenile
Comments: 1
Kardashian Murdered in 1916
In 1916, Newton, Massachusetts tailor Manoog Kardashian was attacked by one of his employees who stabbed him with cutting shears and bit a chunk out of his right cheek over what may be one of the dumbest reasons to assault someone. Kardashian died nine days later, but not necessarily from his wounds. I came across […]
Posted: September 3rd, 2013 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: 1900-1919, Massachusetts, Murder, Workplace Violence
Comments: none
1907 Med Students use Fresh Grave for Anatomy Lab
Like many of the stories I run across, I cringe when I read them because they just seem too ghoulish or graphic. But then I think, ‘well, this is the way it was and it’s better to be honest with this history than hide it.’ That’s how I came to decide to post this story. […]
Posted: August 14th, 2013 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: 1900-1919, bizarre, New York
Comments: none
Two Opium Dens Busted in 1901 Raids
“The two visitors were so far on their way to dreamland that they did not pay any attention to the entrance of the officer.” – My favorite quote for this story. Opium Den Raided [Burlington, Iowa, Sept. 12, 1901]—Two sallow-complexioned Chinamen and one wreck of white humanity lined up at the police station bar yesterday […]
Posted: July 21st, 2013 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: 1900-1919, opium
Comments: none
Mug Shot: President McKinley Assassin Leon Czologz, 1901
Forgotten President, Forgotten Assassin In the 1890s, Leon Czologz joined the growing American anarchist movement because of what he perceived as a great injustice to the common man by the wealthy who exploited the poor to enrich themselves. He blamed government for this inequality and after reading about the assassination of Italian King Umberto I […]
Posted: July 9th, 2013 under Mug Shot Monday.
Tags: 1900-1919, Assassin, Execution, New York
Comments: none
The Andrea Yates Epidemic of 1901
As sad as this story is, in the course of my research for other vintage crimes I come across many similar accounts of parents murdering their children (known as filicide) due to depression, religious fervor, or other reasons. In most of these cases, poverty drives their depression. With just some light searching done of newspaper […]
Posted: July 7th, 2013 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: 1900-1919, Filicide, Murder, Women
Comments: none
Workplace Violence in 1901
The following story points out that instances of rage killing in the workplace are not limited to the modern era. I searched for follow-up stories to this incident but could find nothing. From Pig-killer to Man Killing SOMERVILLE. MASS. July 5, 1901. With a maniacal shriek, John Murphy turned from pig-sticking to man killing in […]
Posted: July 2nd, 2013 under Rediscovered Crime News.
Tags: 1900-1919, Massachusetts, Murder, Workplace Violence
Comments: none