Category Archives: Killers

Article from Wikipedia

Mengele in uniform

Josef Mengele (March 16, 1911 – February 7, 1979), was a German SS officer and a physician in the German Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau. He gained notoriety chiefly for being one of the SS physicians who supervised the selection of arriving transports of prisoners, determining who was to be killed and who was to become a forced laborer, and for performing human experiments on camp inmates, amongst whom Mengele was known as the Angel of Death.

 

After the war, he first hid in Germany under an assumed name, then escaped and lived in South America, first in Argentina (until 1959) and finally in Brazil, where he accidentally drowned. This was confirmed using DNA testing on his remains.

 

Early years and career

Mengele was born in Günzburg, Bavaria, eldest of three sons of Karl Mengele (1881–1959), a well-to-do industrialist, and his wife Walburga Hupfauer (d. 1946). He had two younger brothers, Karl (1912–1949) and Alois (1914–1974).

 

In 1930, Mengele left Günzburg gymnasium (high school). He studied medicine and anthropology at the University of Munich, earning a doctorate in Anthropology (Ph.D.), supervised by Prof. Theodor Mollison, in 1935 with a dissertation on racial differences in the structure of the lower jaw. He worked as an assistant to Otmar von Verschuer at the Frankfurt University Institute of Hereditary Biology and Racial Hygiene. In 1938 he obtained a doctorate in medicine (M.D.) with a dissertation called “Familial Research on cleft lip and palate and Jaw.” His belief in the Nazi racial ideology was already evident in his academic research. The Universities of Munich and Frankfurt revoked his degrees in 1964.

 

In 1931, at the age of 20, Mengele joined the Stahlhelm, a paramilitary organization, which was incorporated into the SA in 1933. He resigned shortly thereafter, alluding to health problems. He applied for Nazi party membership in 1937 and in 1938 joined the SS. In 1939, Mengele married his first wife, Irene Schönbein, with whom he had one child, a son named Rolf.

 

In 1940 he was placed in the reserve medical corps, following which he served with a Waffen-SS unit. In 1942 he was wounded at the Russian front and was pronounced medically unfit for combat, and promoted to the rank of SS-Hauptsturmführer (Captain). During his service on the Eastern Front during 1941-1942, Mengele received the Iron Cross, both first class and second class, the Wound Badge in black, and the Eastern Front Medal.

 

Auschwitz

In 1943 Mengele replaced another doctor who had fallen ill at the Nazi extermination camp Birkenau. On May 24, 1943, he became medical officer of Auschwitz-Birkenau’s “Gypsy camp.” In August 1944, this camp was liquidated and all its inmates gassed. Subsequently Mengele became Chief Medical Officer of the main infirmary camp at Birkenau. He was not, though, the Chief Medical Officer of Auschwitz — superior to him was SS-Standortarzt (garrison physician) Eduard Wirths.

 

It was during his 21-month stay at Auschwitz that Mengele achieved infamy, and it is for this period that he is referred to as the Angel of Death. Mengele took turns with the other SS physicians at Auschwitz in meeting incoming prisoners at the ramp, determining who would be retained for work and who would be sent to the gas chambers immediately.

 

Human experimentation

Mengele used Auschwitz as an opportunity to continue his research on heredity, using inmates for human experimentation. He was particularly interested in twins, who were selected and placed in special barracks. He also studied a disease called Noma, which particularly affected children from the Gypsy camp. While the cause of Noma remains relatively unknown, it is now known that it affects chiefly children suffering from malnutrition and a weak immune system, and many develop the disease shortly after having suffered another illness like measles or tuberculosis. Mengele tried to prove that Noma was caused by racial inferiority.

Mengele took an interest in physical abnormalities discovered among the arrivals at the concentration camp. This included dwarves, notably the Ovitz family, a Jewish Romanian artist’s family, seven of whose ten members were dwarves. Prior to their deportation they toured in Eastern Europe as the Lilliput Troupe. He often called them “my dwarf family”; to him they seemed to be the perfect expression of “the abnorm.”

 

Mengele’s experiments were of dubious scientific value, including attempts to change eye colour by injecting chemicals into children’s eyes, various amputations of limbs and other brutal surgeries. Rena Gelissen’s account of her time in Auschwitz details certain experiments performed on female prisoners around October 1943. During roll calls Mengele would show up to perform a “special work detail” selection, which fooled some into thinking that this would be a relief from the otherwise hard labour they were performing. Mengele would experiment on the chosen girls, performing sterilization and shock treatments. Most of the victims died, either due to the experiments or later infections.

 

A Hungarian Jewish prisoner doctor, Miklos Nyiszli, who was an experienced pathologist and had studied in Germany, was chosen to work as Mengele’s assistant, and wrote about his experiences. The subjects of Mengele’s research were better fed and housed than ordinary prisoners and were for the time being safe from the gas chambers. To Mengele they were nevertheless not fellow human beings, but rather material on which to conduct his experiments. On several occasions he killed subjects simply to be able to dissect them afterwards.

 

After Auschwitz

When the SS abandoned the Auschwitz Death Camp on January 17, 1945, Mengele came to Groß Rosen camp in lower Silesia, again working as camp physician. Groß Rosen was dissolved in the end of February, when the Red Army was already very near. Mengele worked in other camps for a short time, and, on May 2, joined a Wehrmacht medical unit led by his former colleague at the Institute of Hereditary Biology and Racial Hygiene, Dr. Hans Otto Kahler, in Bohemia. The unit hurried west to avoid being captured by the Soviets and were taken as POWs by the Americans. Mengele, initially registered under his own name, was released in June 1945 with papers giving his name as “Fritz Hollmann.” From July 1945 until May 1949, he worked as a farmhand in a small village near Rosenheim, Bavaria, staying in contact with his wife and his old friend Hans Sedlmeier. It was Sedlmeier who arranged Mengele’s escape to Argentina via Innsbruck, Sterzing, Merano and Genova. Mengele may have been assisted by the ODESSA network.

 

Mengele in South America

In Buenos Aires, Mengele at first worked as a construction worker, but came in contact with influential Germans soon, which allowed him an affluent lifestyle for the next years. He also got money from his family and from Sedlmeier. In Buenos Aires, he got to know other notorious Nazis such as Hans-Ulrich Rudel and Adolf Eichmann. In 1955, he bought a fifty per cent share of a pharmaceutical company, the same year he divorced from his wife, Irene. Three years later he married Martha Mengele, the widow of his younger brother Karl Jr.; she then came to Argentina with her then fourteen-year-old son, Dieter.

 

Although he was doing well in South America, Mengele feared being captured so he left Argentina in 1959 and moved to Paraguay after managing to get a Paraguayan passport on the name “Mengele José”. Mengele hoped that Paraguay would be safer for him, as dictator Alfredo Stroessner was of German descent. Among other locations in Paraguay, he lived on the outskirts of Hohenau, a German colony in the department of Itapúa. His anxiety, however, haunted him, especially after he heard of the Mossad’s abduction of Eichmann and the trial and execution in Israel. Using the identity of “Peter Hochbichler”, he crossed the border to Brazil in 1960 and lived in São Paulo with the Austrian-born Neo-Nazi Wolfgang Gerhard, who was a member of Hans-Ulrich Rudel’s “Kameradenwerk.”

 

The same year, Mengele moved to Nova Europa, about three hundred kilometres (186 miles) outside São Paulo, where he lived with the Hungarian refugees Geza and Gitta Stammer, working as manager of their farm. In the seclusion of his Brazilian hideaway, Mengele became depressed, egomaniacal and aggressive, always fearing being captured. In 1974, when his relationship with the Stammer family was coming to an end, Rudel and Gerhard discussed relocating Mengele to Bolivia where he could spend time with Klaus Barbie, but Mengele rejected this proposal. Instead, he lived in a bungalow in a suburb of São Paulo for the last years of his life. In 1977, his only son Rolf, never having known his father before, visited him there and found an unrepentant Nazi who claimed he “had never personally harmed anyone in his whole life.”

Mengele, whose health had deteriorated for years, died on February 7, 1979, in Santos, Brazil, when he suffered a stroke while swimming in the sea. He was buried in Embu under the name “Wolfgang Gerhard,” whose ID-card he had used since 1976.

 

The manhunt for Mengele

Mengele was listed on the Allies’ list of war criminals as early as 1944, his name was mentioned in the Nuremberg trials several times, but Allied forces were convinced that Mengele was dead, which was also claimed by Irene and the family in Günzburg. In 1959, after suspicions had grown that he was still alive, given his divorce from Irene in 1955 and his marriage to Martha in 1958, a warrant of arrest was issued by the German authorities. Subsequently, German attorneys, such as Fritz Bauer, Israel’s Mossad, and private investigators like Simon Wiesenthal and Beate Klarsfeld followed the trail of the “Angel of Death.” The last confirmed sightings of Mengele placed him in Paraguay, and it was believed that he was still hiding there, protected by Hans-Ulrich Rudel and dictator Alfredo Stroessner. Sightings of Mengele were reported all over the world, but they turned out to be false clues.

 

In 1985, the German police raided the house of Hans Sedlmeier in Günzburg and seized address books, letters and papers hinting at the grave in Embu. Mengele was exhumed in May 1985 and identified by forensic experts. Rolf Mengele issued a statement saying that he “had no doubt it was the remains of his father“. Everything was kept quiet “to protect those who knew him in South America“, Rolf said. In 1992, a DNA test confirmed Mengele’s identity. He had evaded capture for 34 years and was the subject of Ira Levin’s best-selling novel and later film adaptation, The Boys from Brazil.

[Check out CrimeLibrary for a more detailed story on Dr. Josef Mengele]

 

This article found on Uncyclopedia.

 

Joy To The World The Big Man’s Dead

(Sung to the tune of “Joy To The World)

Joy to the world
That Barney’s dead
We barbecued his head!
What happened to his body?
We flushed it down the potty
Down into the sewer, straight into the manure
Round and round it goes!

Five years later, chewin’ on his underwear
Wish he had another pair
Eaten by a polar bear!
Chewin’ on his underwear

Nine years later, had another barbecue
I had to go to the restroom
I run up the stairs and look in the toilet
And there was Barney’s head!

Joy to the world
That Barney’s dead
We barbecued his head!
What happened to his body?
We flushed it down the potty
Round and round it goes like Indiana Jones
We watched it go round and round!

 

I Hate You

(Sung to the tune of “This Old Man”)

I hate you
You hate me
Let’s tie Barney to a tree
With an M16 and a pistol full of lead
We just shot off Barney’s head

I hate you
You hate me
Barney gave you H.I.V.
So we punched him in the balls and shot him in the head
Now that purple thing is dead

I hate you
You hate me
Lets all go and kill Barney
With a baseball bat
And a Four-by-Four
No more purple dinosaur

I hate you
You Hate Me
Let’s tie Barney to a tree!
I’ll get the match,
You get the gasoline,
Light the match and watch him scream.

I hate you
You hate me
We’re a racist family
So let’s kill that big, fat freak they call Barney
Then we will be more happy

I hate you,
You hate me
Let’s hang Barney from a tree
With a knife, and a gun, and a bullet through his head
Till that purple thing is dead

I hate you,
You hate me
The ratel army killed Barney
With a gun and a tank and 12 atomic bombs
We’re all glad that Barney’s gone

I hate you,
You hate me
Lets tie Barnie to a tree
Stab him in the back shoot him in the head
Now the purple thing is dead

 

On Top of Old Oakey

(Sung to the tune of “On Top Of Old Smokey”)

On Top of a old oakey
All covered in blood
I shot evil Barney
With a .500 stud

I went to his fun’ral
I went to his grave
Some people threw flowers
I threw a grenade

Now Sorry for Barney
all covered in red
And now you can all see
that Barney is dead

I dug up the body
and cloned the remains
And just for the pleasure
I killed him again

 

Deck the Halls

(A violent Christmas favorite)

Deck the Halls with bloody dino
Hahahahahahahahaha
See the nuke charge like a rhino
Hahahahahahahahaha
Barney’s dead on Christmas day
Hahahahahahahahaha
Now There’s nothing left to say
Hahahahahahahahaha

Evil mind controller’s gone
Hahahahahahahahaha
His remains lay on the lawn
Hahahahahahahahaha
Now the world is safe again
Hahahahahahahahaha
No more counting one through ten
Hahahahahahahahaha

Barney’s evil scheme is ruined
Hahahahahahahahaha
Now the studio is suin’
Hahahahahahahahaha
Oops! They ran out in less than an hour
Hahahahahahahahaha
Barney has lost all his power
Hahahahahahahahaha

Deck the halls with heads of Barney
Hahahahahahahahaha
Serves him right for being crummy
Hahahahahahahahaha
Now let’s sing this song again
Hahahahahahahahaha
This song shall never end
Hahahahahahahahaha

 

Barney Opening Theme Song

Barney was a dinosaur
from our imagination,
Put him in the microwave,
He’ll die from radiation!

Barney was a dinosaur
From our imagination,
He stuck a pencil up his arse
And died from constipation!

 

Jingle Bells

(Another violent Christmas favorite)

Dashing through the snow
On a pair of broken skis
Downhill Barney goes
Crashing into trees
The snow is turning red
We think he’s almost dead
Now let’s go get a two-by-four and hit him on the head

Jingle Bells, shotgun shells
Purple dino’s dead
We struck him with a two-by-four
And shot him in the head

Baby Bop, Baby Bop
Tried to save his life
But an action man from Pakistan
Stabbed her with a knife

 

Row Your Boat

(Especially fun around the campfire)

Row, row, row, your boat
gently down the stream
Push Barney overboard
And listen to him scream

Five days later
he rose from the dead
took a 12-gauge shotgun
and blew off his head

 

ABCs

(Just for fun!)

A, B, C, D, E, F, G
Barney is my enemy!
Hit ‘im with a piece of lead
Now we know that Barney’s dead!
Now you know I hate Barney
Next time won’t you sing with me!

I’ve always thought that Barney was evil, that he is planning to take over the world one day and to do so, he starts of by brainwashing the minds of little children. I don’t trust him one bit. He is too creepy to be friends with children. Turns out, I’m not alone in this. Here’s what the rest of the public feels about Barney.

From Todd’s Humor Archive.

JUST WHAT IS BARNEY, ANYWAY?

Barney is said to be some guy in a big foam rubber dinosaur suit. Several things about this theory don’t add up. For one thing, Barney has full mobility.

Remember Big Bird? Did you ever notice how only one of his hands ever did anything and the other was always clutching his stomach like he was about to puke up gizzard stones? That’s because Big Bird was a guy in a suit. That other hand was operating his beak.

Barney, however, has two fully functional arms, a working mouth, and large moving cow like eyes. If a man is in there, he’s no ordinary man. (Plus, he’s repeatedly demonstrated the ability to leap in the air a CLICK HIS HEELS. Any NORMAL human would sweat like a cheese trying stunts like that.)

If he’s not human, what is it? Let’s speculate, shall we?

1) He’s a real dinosaur.

Possibly. Although resemblance to any known fossil remains is questionable, the geological record is far from complete. Since Barney is apparently warm-blooded, this would support current revisionist paleontological theory. (The singing ability is a new twist, however.)

And how would we know if dinosaurs were purple or not? On the other hand, while he is built along the lines of a carinvore (Family Tyrannosauridae) his teeth seem those of a herbivore, or at best, an omnivore. Assuming those are teeth.

2) He’s some evil supernatural entity posing as a warm, cuddly parent figure in order to train young children to be his unholy army of ultimate darkness.

You know, the more I think about this one, the more likely it seems. Look at the facts. Kids LOVE him, and no one knows why. Obviously, there are unclean forces at work here. The way to test this out would be to confront the fiend with a bloody crucifix.

3) He’s a space alien.

This would explain a lot. Barney, as a xenomormorph, might have access to all sorts of technology that we couldn’t even begin to comprehend: hypnosis beams, holographic projectors, even large-scale matter re-assemblers. All of theses could account for the “powers of imagination” as depicted on the show.

HOW DO WE STOP BARNEY?

1) Wait for him to go away. Most media darlings eventually do this, however, our children’s BRAINS are at stake.

2) Stuff a chicken and rock salt in his mouth, then sew his lips shut. You could, in fact, fit several chickens in there.

3) Find out where his power supply is and unplug him. If he’s a space alien, he may well be a robot. Let’s hope he doesn’t have a breeder reactor in his tail. (Now that I think of it, he probably gets his power from…The Children’s Television Workshop. Cut their funding!)

4) Stop believing in him. Scoff if you will, but this has worked with others recorded in history.

Anyway, I’m open to suggestions. If you think you know WHAT Barney is, or HOW to destroy him, let us know. Until there’s an alt.barney.die.die.die we’ll confine ourselves here. And remember, you won’t get your kids back until Barney is dead.dead.dead.

Barney the Dinosaur is amongst us all, brainwashing hapless children, and you sit there at your terminal chuckling at my so-called “madness”. But listen. There’s still time to put an end to his evil Jurassic schemes. Barney is some kind of malignant supernatural force that has invaded a toy stuffed kind of malignant supernatural force that has invaded a toy stuffed dinosaur.

From Barney the Evil Dinosaur

Proof that Barney is related to Satan. It is a known fact (if not a sad one) that Barney is a CUTE PURPLE DINOSAUR. The bible was written in many languages, the most common being Latin (Roman). The Romans had no letter “U,” and instead used “V” for printing. Therefore, CUTE PURPLE DINOSAUR becomes:

CVTE PVRPLE DINOSAVR

 

Take that phrase and extract the Roman numerals, and we have:

C V V L D I V Their decimal equivalents are:

100, 5, 5, 50, 500, 1, and 5

Adding these numbers produces the single didgit 666, the number recorded in the bible as the symbol of the beast, THE NUMBER OF THE EARTH’S GREATEST EVIL! UNDENIABLE PROOF THAT BARNEY IS RELATED TO SATAN!

Given: Barney= CUTE PURPLE DINOSUAR

S R
CUTE PURPLE DINOSAUR Given
CVTE PVRPLE DINOSAVR Write in Latin
CV V L DI V Roman Numerals
100 5 5 50 500 1 5 Arabic Numerals
100+5+5+50+500+1+5 Add
666 Total
666=SATAN Given
BARNEY=SATAN Proven

This proves it Barney=Satan. It’s a big conspiracy to get the young generation to worship Satan in a plot to destroy the world!!! Also check out;

German Police Investigate Alleged Cannibal Murder

Germany, December 13, 2002

 

Germans woke up on Thursday to the traumatic news that a man had killed and eaten another man with the victim’s approval. The deed was allegedly recorded on video.

 

For a day at least, Germans may have forgotten about their economic woes as the country found itself hitting the headlines over an altogether more frightening story.

 

Police have arrested a man who claims to have killed and eaten a friend and recorded the deed on video, allegedly with the victim’s approval. The 41-year-old suspect from the picturesque Hessian town of Rotenburg told police that he met his 42-year-old victim, microchip engineer from Berlin, via the Internet. He said they shared homosexual and cannibalistic leanings.

 

Police said they found the video along with deep-frozen flesh and skeletal remains when they searched the suspect’s flat. The video allegedly shows the suspect and the victim agreeing on the murder. Forensic experts are searching the house and surrounding areas for the remains of other possible victims.

 

internet clue

The killing goes back to 2001. Police only stumbled across it after the man placed another ad in the Internet looking for a man willing to allow himself to be killed and eaten.

 

The last alleged case of cannibalism in Germany dates back to 1995 when a 33-year-old man standing trial for murder and robbery claimed to have eaten parts of his victim, however, his claim was never proven.

 

Police say the suspect is not mentally disturbed. A spokesman said had that been the case he would have been placed in a psychiatric unit instead of a detention cell.

 

The man is being held on suspicion of murder which carries a life sentence. Should his story check out, he would only face a charge of so-called murder by demand. A conviction would be punishable by a maximum of five years in prison.

 

 

German ‘cannibal’ convicted of murder

Berlin, May 11, 2005

 

A man who was inspired by a high-profile cannibal case to kill and dismember a man he met on the Internet was convicted of murder today and sentenced to 13 years in prison.

 

The Berlin state court ordered Ralf Meyer, 41, into psychiatric care.

 

Meyer, who went on trial last week, had acknowledged killing Joe Ritzkowsky, a 33-year-old music teacher from Berlin who answered an Internet solicitation for sadomasochistic sex.

 

Meyer “must be dealt with accordingly and locked away,” presiding Judge Peter Faust said as he announced the verdict.

 

Meyer’s defence team said he was inspired by the case of Armin Meiwes, who was convicted in January 2004 in western Germany of killing and eating a man he met on the Internet.

 

In the Berlin case, Ritzkowsky’s corpse was dismembered and parts were stored in Meyer’s refrigerator in his apartment in the working class Neukoelln neighbourhood, but Meyer testified that, after the killing, he was too disgusted to actually eat the body parts.

 

“My biggest mistake was that I didn’t go into psychiatric care at the right time,” Meyer said in a closing statement to the court. He added that “I would like to apologise to the people who knew him, his friends and his mother.”

 

Ritzkowsky was likely suffocated, but a doctor testified he could not be certain of the exact cause of death because the corpse was so badly mutilated.

 

Harp’s Hill is near the Pond River in western Muhlenberg County, Ky., not far from Highway 62. There is a crossing in the road near Dixon named Harp’s Head and one of the crossing roads is named Harp’s Head Road. Some miles away, the precise location lost to time, there is a cave known as Harp’s House. To tell how these places earned their names is to tell the story of Micajah (Big) and Wiley (Little) Harp, America’s first known serial killers.

 

They passed for brothers, but were cousins, sons of brothers John and William Harpe, Scottish immigrants to Orange County, N.C. The boys were named William (Micajah/Big), son of John, and Joshua (Wiley/Little), son of William. Big Harp and Little Harp left home as young men in 1775, aiming to become overseers of slaves in Virginia. Career plans diverted by the American Revolution, the Harps instead became Tory outlaws in a gang that roved the North Carolina countryside, raping farmers’ daughters, pillaging livestock and crops, and burning farmhouses. In the attempted kidnapping of one young girl by a Tory rape gang, Little Harp was shot and wounded by local Patriot Captain James Wood.

 

In 1780, the British took the Tory irregulars and their Cherokee allies into their ranks. The Harps fought under Tarleton’s command at King’s Mountain, near the Carolinas’ border, in October; in the Battle of Blackstocks in November, and in January 1781 in the Battle of Cowpens. Shortly after Cowpens, the Harps left the army and joined up with their Cherokee confederates, taking part in the Indian raid on Station Bluff, now Nashville, Tenn. They soon returned to North Carolina, where they kidnapped Captain Wood’s daughter, Susan, and another local girl, Maria Davidson. The kidnapped women would serve as wives to the Harps until the bitter end.

 

The Harps took the women across the Appalachians to the Cherokee-Chickamauga town of Nickjack, in the vicinity of what is now Chattanooga, Tenn. Along the way, a member of the gang, Moses Doss, objected to the brutal treatment of the women and the Harps killed him. The Harps, with their wives, lived in the Indian village at Nickjack for over a decade. In that time, they participated in British-backed Indian raids on Kentucky settlers west of the mountains, such as the Battle of Blue Licks in 1782. Later they took part in the Indian attack on Bledsoe’s Lick in Tennessee. The night before the Americans finally wiped out Nickjack in 1794, the Harps received warning and managed to escape with their women before the battle.

 

While living at Nickjack, both women had given birth twice; each time, the fathers murdered their babies. Counted with Moses Doss, the four infanticides made five known killings before 1797, or so, when the Harps settled in a cabin on Beaver’s Creek near the frontier capital of Knoxville, Tenn. On June 1, 1797 Little Harp legitimately married Sally Rice, the daughter of a local minister, bringing the number of Harp wives to three.

 

a killing rampage

After two killings, one in Knox County and one on the Wilderness Trail, the Harps left Tennessee in December 1798 for Kentucky, where they killed two traveling men from Maryland. The Harps liked to gut their victims and fill their stomach cavities with rocks to weight them down so they’d sink in a river.

 

When they stopped for breakfast on Dec. 12, 1798 at John Farris’ Wayside House near the Big Rock Castle River, despite the thieving and killing along the way, the Harps were hungry and flat broke, filthy and bedraggled. But there was a kind and generous young man who was staying at the inn who invited them to be his guests at his table.

 

His name was John Langford. He was traveling from Virginia to pay a visit to a friend in Crab Orchard, Ky. A halfway house, such as Farris’, was a place many travelers stopped and waited in order to join up with others heading in the same direction. It was wild and dangerous countryside and earned its name, The Wilderness. Two cattle drovers found Langford’s mutilated corpse in The Wilderness two days later, when their cattle shied off Boone’s Trace into the woods at the scent of blood.

 

The body was taken back to John Farris’ Wayside House and the innkeeper pointed the way to the Harps and their women, who were apprehended outside Crab Orchard. All five were imprisoned, but the Harp men managed to escape, leaving their women to face justice alone. The Harps fled for the barely settled and ill-defined Henderson County, Ky. Eventually, the Harp wives were released, escorted out of town with three infants born in jail, and one gift horse among them.

 

As abused and frightened women are wont to do, they immediately swapped the horse for a canoe, traveled west along the Green River toward the Ohio River, and a reunion with the husbands Harp at a pirates’ den called Cave-In-The-Rock on the Illinois side.

 

The Kentucky frontier had gone on alert after the Langford killing and the Harps’s subsequent escape from the law in Danville. Kentucky Gov. James Garrard ordered out a posse after the Harps. The posse caught up with the Harps in a cane field in Central Kentucky, but the posse members were too afraid to try to capture them, allowing them to get away through the cane.

 

In disgust, one of the posse members, Henry Scaggs, went to the home of Col. Daniel Trabue, a Revolutionary War veteran and wilderness pioneer, who lived near the present Columbia in Adair County, to report the posse’s cowardice.

 

As Scaggs sat in Trabue’s house discussing the critical situation, Trabue’s young son’s dog, covered in blood, came limping into the yard. The dog had left the house earlier with Trabue’s 13-year-old son, John, who had been sent along the old buffalo trace to borrow some flour and seed beans from a neighbor. About two weeks later the boy’s body was found, decomposed, dismembered, and dumped in a sinkhole. The seed beans were there, but the flour was gone.

 

In response to the boy’s murder, the governor issued a $300 reward on each of the Harp heads.

 

In the reward notice issued at Frankfort, Ky., Micajah Harp was described as being about six feet tall, as robustly built with an erect carriage, about 32 years old, with short black hair growing low on his forehead. He wore “a striped nankeen coat, dark blue woolen stockings, leggins of drab cloth and trousers of the same as the coat.” Wiley was “very meagre in the face…looks older but really younger, and has likewise a downcast countenance. He had on a coat of the same stuff as his brother’s, and had a drab surtout coat over the close-bodied one.”

 

Moving north, the Harps killed a man named Edmonton, a settler named Stump, and, upon reaching the Potts Plantation near the mouth of the Saline River, they killed three men sitting around a campfire. Meanwhile, the posse, out after the Harps on their race across the state, summarily hanged some dozen criminals along the way, and ran a host of outlaws out of Kentucky. They stopped just short of Cave-in-The-Rock, on the Illinois side of the Ohio River, or they might have had the Harps that day.

 

This limestone opening in a bluff above the Ohio River at its junction with the Saline, was a well-known natural landmark throughout the 18th century, a rest stop for river travelers migrating west. Beginning in the 1790s and until the 1830s, it was home base to an entire corporation of river pirates. In 1798, the most famous among them was Samuel Mason, a Revolutionary War veteran turned river bandit. His large sign outside invited weary travelers to “Wilson’s Liquor Vault and House for Entertainment.” His unwary victims were beaten and robbed in the cave, and sometimes they lived to tell about it.

 

Mason’s favorite prey was the slow-moving flatboats laden with produce for Natchez and New Orleans. Pretending to be local pilots guiding the boats through shallow parts of the rapidly flowing and eddy-ridden Ohio, the pirate/pilot would steer the craft onto a shoal, where Mason’s gang would pick it clean and take the goods to market themselves. With the arrival of the Harps and their three wives and three babies, the relatively non-violent ways of the river pirates took a murderous turn. After a few Harp games of taking travelers to the top of the bluff, stripping them naked, and throwing them off, they were politely asked to leave.

 

The final stretch of slaughter took place soon after this, in July 1798, when the Harps returned to Eastern Tennessee. The victims included a farmer named Bradbury; a man named Hardin; a boy named Coffey; William Ballard, who was cut open, filled with stones, and dumped in the Holston River; James Brassel, with his throat ripped apart on Brassel’s Knob; John Tully, father of eight. On the Marrowbone Creek in south central Kentucky, John Graves and his teenaged son, out planting crops, had their heads axed. Moving toward Logan County, the Harps came upon a little girl, whom they killed, as they did a young slave on his way to the mill. Once in Logan County, near today’s Adairville, near the Whippoorwill River, they butchered an entire migrating family asleep in their camp, but for one son who survived.

 

Stopping at a spot on land owned by Samuel Wilson on the Mud River near Russellville, they rested, thinking what to do to escape the posse in close pursuit. (The clearing in which the Harps rested later became a staging ground for Methodist revivals.) Sally’s four-month-old daughter was fretful, perhaps hungry. Big Harp took the baby from her mother’s arms, swung her by her tiny ankles, and brained her little head against the trunk of a tree.

 

still, the killing continued

A man named Trowbridge who’d gone for salt at Robertson’s Lick, his torso hollowed out, loaded with stones and sunk in Highland Creek; Maj. William Love, an overnight guest at the Stegall home in Webster County, who snored; the Stegall’s baby who cried; Mrs. Stegall who screamed when she saw her infant’s throat was slit. Gilmore and Hudgens, returning from the salt lick with their hounds, came upon the Harps. Pretending to be the posse, the Harps accused the two men of being Harps, arrested, and executed them. As they prepared to kill settler George Smith, near where the Harps were living in the cave that came to be known as Harp’s Home, the posse rode in.

 

After a chase, the posse left Big Harp’s body on Harp’s Hill, took his head to the crossroads, Harp’s Head, and displayed it there on Harp’s Head Road, attached to an oak tree, for the sober contemplation of passers-by. Before dying, Big Harp confessed to 20 murders, probably not counting the babies. Estimates are as high as 40, but usually around 30.

 

The three captive Harp wives lived on: Sally Rice returning to her family in Knoxville, remarrying, and migrating west with her new husband and her father, by way of Cave-In-The-Rock; Maria Davidson, called Betsey Roberts, marrying, moving to Illinois and raising a large family; Susan Wood becoming a weaver, raising her surviving daughter in Tennessee, and dying there.

 

As for Wiley, Little Harp, he rejoined the pirate Mason at Cave-In-The-Rock for about four years, when he showed up in Natchez with Mason’s head for the reward money. Little Harp was recognized, hanged, cut down, and decapitated, his own head impaled along the side of the Natchez Trace outside Old Greenville in Mississippi Territory, as a warning to outlaws.

 

At least that is one story of the end of Wylie Harp, and it makes a good ending to the story of The Harps, Big and Little.

[source article]

Alexander “Sawney” Bean(e) was the storied patriarch of a forty-eight member clan in 16th century Scotland brutally executed for the mass murder and cannibalisation of over a thousand people.

 

The story appears in the Newgate Calendar, a crime catalogue of the notorious Newgate Prison in London. While historians tend to believe that Sawney Bean never existed, his story has passed into legend and is part of the Edinburgh tourism industry.

the legend

According to The Newgate Calendar, Alexander Bean was born in East Lothian during the 16th century. His father was a ditch digger and hedge trimmer, and Bean tried to take up the family trades but quickly realised that he had little taste for honest labour.

 

He left home with a vicious woman who apparently shared his inclinations. The couple ended up at a coastal cave in Bannane Head, near Galloway (now South Ayrshire) where they lived undiscovered for some twenty-five years. (The cave was 200 yards deep and during high tide the entrance was blocked by water, and is said to be today’s Bennane Cave, located between Girvan and Ballantrae in Ayrshire).

 

Their many children and grandchildren were products of incest and lawlessness. The brood came to include eight sons, six daughters, eighteen grandsons and fourteen granddaughters. Lacking the gumption for honest labour, the clan thrived by laying careful ambushes at night to rob and murder individuals or small groups. The bodies were brought back to the cave where they were dismembered and cannibalised. Leftovers were pickled, and discarded body parts would sometimes wash up on nearby beaches.

 

The body parts and disappearances did not go unnoticed by the local villagers, but the Beans stayed in the caves by day and took their victims at night. The clan was so secretive that the villagers were not aware of the forty eight murderers living nearby.

 

In a frenetic quest for justice, the townspeople lynched several innocents, and the disappearances continued. Suspicion often fell on local innkeepers since they were the last to see many of the missing people alive.

 

One fateful night, the Beans ambushed a married couple riding from a fair on one horse, but the man proved a tough opponent, deftly holding off the clan with sword and pistol. Unfortunately, they fatally mauled the wife when she fell to the ground in the conflict. Before they could take the resilient husband, a large group of fairgoers appeared on the trail and the Beans fled.

 

With the Beans’ existence finally revealed to the world, it was not long before King James VI of Scotland (later James I of England) heard of the atrocities and decided to lead a manhunt with a team of four hundred men and several bloodhounds, soon finding the Beans’ cave in Bannane Head. The cave was rife with human remains, having been the scene of a thousand plus murders and cannibalistic acts.

 

The clan was captured alive and taken in chains to the Tolbooth Jail in Edinburgh, then transferred to Leith or Glasgow where they were promptly executed without trial; the men had their hands and feet severed and were allowed to bleed to death, and the women and children, after watching the men die, were burned alive. (This recalls, in essence if not in detail, the punishments of hanging, drawing and quartering decreed for men convicted of treason while women convicted of the same were burned. Presumably—whether or not the story had an actual basis—cannibalism was considered the equivalent of treason.)

 

The town of Girvan, located near the crime scene, has another legend about the cannibal clan. It is said that one of Bean’s daughters eventually left the clan and settled in Girvan, where she planted the Hairy Tree. After her family’s capture, the daughter’s identity was revealed by angry locals who hanged her from the bough of the Hairy Tree.

sources and veracity

Whatever the truth may be, Sawney Bean is often considered a mythic figure. The Ayrshire area is known for dark folklore, and the implausibility of four dozen people evading capture for a quarter century has sown the seeds of scepticism amongst many historians.

 

The multitude of disappearances should have led to more expeditious investigation of the area; though mass searches for the missing persons were said to be conducted, it is odd that no one thought to look in the cave earlier on. Moreover, there is a notable lack of written sources; such a long string of atrocities resulting in the involvement of King James VI of Scotland should have generated historical records, but so far none have been uncovered.

 

A recent article by Sean Thomas expresses significant doubt about the accuracy of the Sawney Bean legend:

 

“…from broadsheet to broadsheet, the precise dating of Sawney Bean’s reign of anthropophagic terror varies wildly: sometimes the atrocities occurred during the reign of James VI, whilst other versions claim the Beans lived centuries before.”

This dating could place the murders as far back as the days of Bruce, or even Macbeth. Thomas continues,

 

“Viewed in this light, it is arguable that the Bean story may have a basis of truth but the precise dating of events has become obscured over the years. Perhaps the dating of the murders was brought forward by the editors and writer of the broadsheets, so as to make the story appear more relevant to the readership … To add to the intrigue, we do know that cannibalism was not unknown in mediæval Scotland and that Galloway was in mediæval times a very lawless place; perhaps nothing on the scale of the Bean legend took place, but every story grows and is embroidered over time.”

Thomas also notes that newspapers and diaries during the era when Sawney Bean was supposedly active make no mention of ongoing disappearances of hundreds of persons.

 

Moreover, according to nutrition researchers, a group of forty-eight would have consumed far more people than alleged in the Newgate Calendar. In order to survive for some twenty-five years, the Beans would have depopulated the entire southwestern region of Scotland.

The legend of Sawney Bean first appeared in the British chapbooks (rumour magazines of the day), which today leads many to argue that the story was a political propaganda tool to denigrate the Scots after the Jacobite Rebellions. Thomas disagrees by noting,

 

“If the Sawney Bean story is to be read as deliberately anti-Scottish, how do we explain the equal emphasis on English criminals in the same publications? Wouldn’t such an approach rather blunt the point?”

[source article]

“Everyone starts out totally dependent on a woman. The idea that she could turn out to be your enemy is terribly frightening,” Lord Astor once said. Some medical experts believe that genetics are what predispose a person to violence. Other experts contend that it is solely an individual’s environment. Whether it was genetics, her childhood environment or a combination of both, Mary Ann Robson Mowbray Ward Robinson Cotton proved to be a textbook serial killer, long before the textbook was written.

 

Mary Ann was born into a lower-class family in Low Moorsley, England. Her father worked long hours in the mines. At home, Mary Ann knew her father only as a strict disciplinarian and religious fanatic. He moved the family to Sunderland when Mary Ann was eight years old. He died the following year in a mining accident. Mary Ann was considered fortunate because her mother remarried, preventing them from abject poverty. Unfortunately, for Mary Ann, she did not care for her stepfather much more than she had with her own father. Mary Ann left home in search of a better life. She worked as a housekeeper for a while and then began to train as a seamstress. It was during this time that Mary Ann met her first husband.

 

Husband #1

Pregnant with their first child, 19-year-old Mary Ann married William Mowbray in July 1852. Together they had nine children, and although child morbidity was higher in the nineteenth century, it was still rather odd that four of their first five children died before their first birthday. These were the first known victims to die at Mary Ann’s hands. Gastric fever was the listed cause of death. (Gastric fever has similar symptoms to arsenic poisoning).

 

As her father had done when she was eight years old, William moved the Mowbray family to Sunderland where he too went to work in the mines. While living in Sunderland three more of their children died. At that time, those deaths were diagnosed as the result of gastric fever. In January 1865, William died unexpectedly. Having determined his death to be from gastric fever, it would not be until the benefit of hindsight that doctors and police alike realized the real causes of these deaths. William’s life was insured by the British and Prudential Insurance office and Mary Ann collected a payout of £35 on his death. It was to become a familiar theme.

 

Husband #2

The 32-year-old widow, along with her two daughters, moved to Seaham Harbour, a wealthier part of England. There she became involved with Joseph Natress, who was already engaged to another woman. Unable to persuade Joseph out of his engagement, Mary Ann returned to Sunderland, but not before burying another of her children.

 

Mary Ann sent her remaining child, nine-year-old Isabella, to live with Mary Ann’s mother. Meanwhile, Mary Ann began working at The Sunderland Infirmary where she made legitimate daily use of arsenic. Arsenic combined with soap made an easy job of her cleaning duties at the infirmary. Displaying a pleasant personality, Mary Ann struck up a friendship with one of the patients, George Ward. The couple married in August 1865. A new husband did not change the psychopathic behavior Mary Ann exhibited. Moreover, when George died 14 months into their marriage, after a long illness characterised by paralysis and intestinal problems. The attending doctor later gave evidence that Ward was an ailing man but was surprised he had died so suddenly. Once again Mary Ann collected insurance money from the death of her husband and not one person held Mary Ann in suspicion.

 

Husband #3

At the age of 33, Mary Ann had lost two husbands and eight children. How many women could have emotionally and mentally survived such tragedy? Yet, Mary Ann seemed unmoved by these deaths. Instead, she was again on the prowl for her next husband. James Robinson was in her sights and it would cost him three children before he realized how horrific a person Mary Ann was.

 

Initially Mary Ann worked as a housekeeper for James. Not long after she was hired, James’ infant son died. James turned to Mary Ann for comfort. That comfort turned intimate and Mary Ann was once again pregnant. However, it was at this same time that her mother became gravely ill. Mary Ann went to care for her mother and to visit her now 11-year-old daughter Isabella. Although reportedly recovering nicely, Mary Ann’s mother died just nine days after Mary Ann’s arrival. Unfortunately for Isabella, her grandmother’s death meant returning to the care of her mother. Did Isabella fear for her life? It is not unreasonable to conclude that she did.

 

Together Mary Ann and Isabella returned to the Robinson home. Within a month of their return Isabella and two of James’ children died, all from gastric fever. Still no one suspected Mary Ann. Not even James was concerned that three of his five children had died since he first entrusted their care to Mary Ann. Instead, he again turned to her for comfort, this time marrying her. They wed in August 1867. One month later Mary Ann gave birth to her tenth child, a girl, Mary Isabella. The infant girl died a few days later. Finally, someone was suspicious of Mary Ann. James became concerned after Mary Isabella died and had became suspicious of his wife’s insistence that he insure his life. He had discovered that she had run up debts of £60 behind his back and had stolen more than £50 that she was supposed to have banked. The last straw was when he found she had been forcing his children to pawn household valuables for her. He threw her out of their home, without divorcing her. Oh, Mary Ann left, but not before taking every penny in James’ bank accounts.

 

Husband #4

Free from any of her supposed burdens, Mary Ann sought out the companionship of a wealthy widower. Mary Ann took up with Frederick Cotton. Still married to James Robinson, Mary Ann had little use for formalities such as a divorce. Pregnant with Frederick’s child, they married, adding bigamy to Mary Ann’s growing list of crimes. Having learned from her attempt to insure James, Mary Ann wasted no time in insuring Frederick and his children. Soon thereafter Frederick, three of his children and he and Mary Ann’s child all died in quick succession, and all from gastric fever. Insurance had been taken out on his and his son’s lives.

 

Lover

Not one to even pretend to mourn the loss of a loved one, Mary Ann soon had a lover living with her in the Cotton household. The calm down period between her killings was growing shorter and shorter. Her live-in lover was soon dead, just after revising his will in Mary Ann’s favour.

 

Death of Charles Edward Cotton and Inquest

Then Charlie Cotton died, Frederick’s seven-year-old son. The insurance policy Mary Ann had taken out on Charles’s life still awaited collection. And so it would have been, but for a careless conversation.

 

Mary Ann’s downfall came when she was asked by a parish official, Thomas Riley, to help nurse a woman who was ill with smallpox. She complained that the last surviving Cotton boy, Charles Edward, was in the way and asked Riley if he could be committed to the workhouse.

 

Riley, who also served as West Auckland’s assistant coroner, said she would have to accompany him. She told Riley that the boy was sickly and added: “I won’t be troubled long. He’ll go like all the rest of the Cottons.”

Riley replied: “No, nothing of the kind — he is a fine, healthy boy”, and so he was shocked five days later when Mary Ann told him that the lad had died. Riley went to the village police and convinced the doctor to delay writing a death certificate until the circumstances could be investigated.

 

Mary Ann’s first port of call after Charles’s death was not the doctor’s but the insurance office. There, she learnt that no money would be paid out until a death certificate was issued. An inquest was held and the jury returned a verdict of natural causes. Mary Ann claimed to have used arrowroot to relieve his illness and said Riley had made the accusations because she had rejected his advances.

 

Then the local newspapers latched on to the story and discovered Mary Ann had moved around northern England and lost three husbands, a lover, a friend, her mother and a dozen children, all of whom had died of stomach fevers.

 

Arrest

Rumour turned to suspicion and forensic inquiry. The doctor who tended to Charles had kept samples and they tested positive for arsenic. He went to the police who arrested Mary Ann and ordered the exhumation of Charles’s body. She was charged with his murder — although the trial was delayed until after the delivery of the child by Quick-Manning.

 

Trial and Execution

The defence at Mary Ann’s trial claimed that Charles died from inhaling arsenic used as a dye in the green wallpaper of the Cotton home. The jury retired for 90 minutes before finding Mary Ann guilty.

 

The Times correspondent reported on 20 May: “After conviction the wretched woman exhibited strong emotion but this gave place in a few hours to her habitual cold, reserved demeanour and while she harbours a strong conviction that the royal clemency will be extended towards her, she staunchly asserts her innocence of the crime that she has been convicted of.”

 

Several petitions were presented to the home secretary, but to no avail. She was hanged at Durham County Jail on 24 March, 1873. She died slowly, the hangman having misjudged the drop required for a “clean” execution.

 

How did she get away with so many deaths?

  • Poison was easy to buy. Arsenic mixed with soap was sold in chemist’s shops to kill bed bugs. The arsenic could be extracted easily.

  • Arsenic poisoning gave the victim sickness and diarrhoea. So did gastric (or stomach) fever. Busy doctors couldn’t tell the difference.

  • A cheap baby food was flour mixed with water. Mothers fed this to babies and didn’t realise that it gave their babies stomach upsets. Thus, sickness in babies was very common. A doctor would see a sick baby and not think it unusual or suspicious.

  • Life expectancy was low in the Victorian times. In the 1880s a quarter of all babies died in their first year; half the population would die before the age of 20 and 75% by 40. Mary Ann was thought to be unlucky to lose so many during her stay in West Auckland but nobody (except Thomas Riley) thought it unbelievable.

  • Mary Ann Cotton moved about the North East and each time she remarried she changed her name. Nobody could know the trails of death left in her wake because nobody made the connection between Mrs Mowbray, Mrs Ward, Mrs Robinson and Mrs Cotton.