"...we should pass over all biographies of 'the good and the great,' while we search carefully the slight records of wretches who died in prison, in Bedlam, or upon the gallows."
~Edgar Allan Poe

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



Here’s a topic I don’t think has been covered much on this blog:  Mystery Mist!  The “Louisville Courier Journal,” October 22, 1907:


Glasgow, Ky., Oct. 21--Several hundred parties arriving here today from Glasgow Junction, ten miles from here, report a strange phenomenon at that place which is mystifying the people of that unusually quiet little town and is simply inexplainable.


On the exact spot where Van Smith killed his half-brother, Bill Bartley, last May, a fine mist, amounting to almost rain, has been falling for the past four weeks; at least it has been noticed that long, but may have been falling longer.  The fact has startled the residents of that section and surrounding country, and as the report spreads interest increases.  The place on which the mist is falling is some twenty feet across and includes the exact spot on which Bartley fell when shot by his half-brother.


Among those who were at the place yesterday were J.A. Conyers, Senator J.C. Gillenwaters and Oscar Seay, who while waiting for a train heard of the strange mist and went to view the spot.  Mr. Conyers, who is well known as a recent appointee in United States Marshal George Long’s office at Louisville, and a prominent politician, was seen and when asked about the matter said that he visited the place and found something like a hundred persons gathered there, discussing the puzzling phenomenon.  He walked slowly across the place where the mist was falling and said in that time his hat was wet and the rain showed perceptibly on his clothes.  When asked how the people explained the presence of the mist, he replied that they did not explain it at all, as they knew of no explanation.  Senator Gillenwaters and Oscar Seay, a well-known Louisville travelling man, tell substantially the same story.


I wasn’t able to learn anything more about the phenomenon.

Monday, November 3, 2025

The Murderer's Angry Skull

Because it’s always fun to see people who play silly buggers with other people’s body parts get a terrifying supernatural comeuppance, let’s look at the time someone stole the skull of a notorious murderer, and almost instantly regretted it.  Consider it a cautionary tale about the dangers of causing someone to rest in pieces.


The murder of Maria Marten is one of those sordid, non-mysterious crimes that nevertheless somehow gain immortal fame.  In 1827, a young man named William Corder, wishing to rid himself of Marten, who had been his lover, killed her and hid the body in a local landmark called the “Red Barn.”  After the corpse was discovered the following year, Corder became the immediate suspect.  He was arrested in London and eventually faced trial, conviction, and the gallows.  As far as is known, Corder’s spirit rested quietly for about fifty years, until someone took a regrettable interest in his skull.





The ghostly sequel to the “Red Barn Murder” was told by British author and ghost-hunter Robert Thurston Hopkins. Hopkins, you might say, literally grew up in the shadow of the infamous murder: He spent his boyhood within the old prison at Bury St. Edmunds, where his father F.C. Hopkins, a prison official, proudly kept a framed copy of Corder’s final confession.


A close friend of Hopkins’ father was one Dr. Kilner, who had a deeper, and far more morbid, interest in the Corder case.  He owned a book about the murder that was bound in Corder’s skin, as well as the murderer’s pickled scalp.  One would think that Kilner owned enough bits and pieces of the late Mr. Corder to satisfy even the most ghoulish tastes, but such was not the case: Corder’s skeleton then resided at the West Suffolk General Hospital, where for years it had been used as a sort of celebrity anatomy display, and Kilner longed to get his hands on the skull.  As he knew that the hospital would not part with its prize, the good doctor decided that his only option was to pinch the thing.


When Kilner sneaked into the hospital one night to do his bit of body-snatching, he lit three candles.  One immediately went out.  When he relit it, the other two went dark.  As he was removing Corder’s skull from the rest of the skeleton, the candles continued mysteriously snuffing themselves out.  One would think Kilner would realize he was being warned, but he blithely replaced Corder’s skull with a ringer he had picked up somewhere, and took his stolen treasure home.


Kilner lovingly polished the skull until it glowed like a gemstone, and placed it in an ebony box which he kept in a cabinet in his drawing room.  However, he was not entirely happy.  He felt a vague unease about his acquisition, which he tried to dismiss as merely his overactive imagination.


A few days after the skull became part of the Kilner household’s bric-a-brac, a servant told the doctor that a man had come to see him.  As it was after his surgery hours, Kilner was a bit irked by the disturbance.  When he asked if the caller was someone the servant recognized, she replied that he was a stranger.  “He is proper old-fashioned looking,” she remarked, “with a furry top hat and a blue overcoat with silver buttons.”


The doctor went to his surgery, asking the servant to follow him with a lamp.  As he entered the room, he caught a glimpse of a figure standing by the window, but when the servant came in with the lamp, the room was empty.


Kilner’s servant swore that she had escorted a man into the surgery.  She surmised that he changed his mind about seeing the doctor, and left.


Not long after this incident, Kilner happened to be looking out a window of his house when he saw a man standing on the lawn.  He was wearing a beaver hat and an old-fashioned blue overcoat.  Kilner went out to confront the man, but by then the figure had disappeared.


Kilner began to have the disconcerting feeling that he was constantly being followed by…something.  At night, he would hear doors mysteriously opening, and the sound of phantom footsteps throughout his house.  Outside his bedroom door, he heard loud breathing, spectral murmurings, and sobbing, accompanied by loud bangs coming from the drawing room.  He started to have dreams where he got the sense that he was being begged to do something.


In short, Kilner knew that he had made someone very unhappy.  And he had a good idea who it was.  William Corder, understandably enough, took great offense at being turned into home décor.


Kilner was now as anxious to return the skull as he had been to steal it.  However, the skull was so highly polished that the difference between it and the rest of the skeleton would be obvious, leading to some very uncomfortable questions.  He had no idea what to do.


One night, Kilner was awakened by a sound from downstairs.  When he lit a candle and looked down over the stairs, he saw a disembodied hand over the handle of the drawing room door.  This hand turned the knob and opened the door.  Then, from the drawing room, there came a sharp noise that sounded like a shotgun blast.  When Kilner ran downstairs to investigate, he was met by a huge gust of wind which blew out the candle, and nearly knocked him off his feet.  When he managed to relight the candle and enter the drawing room, he found that the box containing the skull had been shattered into bits.  Kilner was greeted by Corder’s skull resting in the open cabinet, grinning at him.


That was enough for Dr. Kilner.  Rather selfishly, he gifted the skull to F. C. Hopkins, who was idiot enough to accept it.  As Hopkins walked home with the skull (discreetly wrapped in a handkerchief,) he twisted his ankle and fell flat on the pavement just as a female acquaintance was passing by.  He dropped the skull, which cheerfully rolled at his friend’s feet.  The woman screamed and dashed off.


Hopkins’ life subsequently became very difficult.  His injured ankle kept him bedridden for a week.  His best horse fell into a pit and broke her back.  Both Hopkins and Kilner suffered a series of personal and financial disasters that left both men shattered in spirit. Hopkins finally wised up and did what Kilner should have done a long time before:  He took the skull to a churchyard near Bury St. Edmunds, where he bribed a grave-digger to give it a decent burial. Fortunately, Corder’s spirit seemed content with this compromise, and peace returned to the lives of everyone involved.


At the end of the younger Hopkins’ account of this episode in his 1953 book “Ghosts Over England,” he noted, “if ever you come across a tortoise-shell tinted skull in a japanned cash box, leave it severely alone.”


Excellent advice.  William Corder was clearly a ghost one does not want to cross.

Friday, October 31, 2025

Weekend Link Dump

 


Welcome to this week's Link Dump!

Everyone here at Strange Company HQ wishes you a happy Halloween!






The plague that may not have happened.

The lawyer who led the Nuremberg prosecutions.

Why we just can't kill off the Frankenstein monster.

The still-mysterious Halloween death of Harry Houdini.

A brief history of the haunted house.

A woman's unsolved murder.

The controversy over "The Telepathy Tapes."

The Americas' oldest book.

We want a world full of happy bees!

Look, when you choose to film a movie about demonic possession, don't come crying to me when things get weird.

Look, when you choose to have archaeological exhibits, don't come crying to me when people leave ancient body parts on your doorstep.

The year when Italy was invaded by UFOs.

A rejected suitor turns to murder.

The ghosts of English Heritage sites.

In 1907, a man walked on a lot of water.

A ghostly catfight in London.

A famous archaeological hoax.

The blue dogs of Chernobyl.

A homicidal babysitter.

A haunted church on Halloween night.

Tod Browning's enduring "Freaks."

The first women to survive Caesarean deliveries.

The bacteria that killed Napoleon's troops in Russia.

When the Devil really made them do it.

We have a lot to thank Jupiter for.

The life of Valentina Visconti, Duchess of Orleans.

The actor who is most famous for being kidnapped.

A midnight ramble with Teddy Roosevelt.

The history of the word "fawning."

An undertaker gets a bad fright.

An explosion in Portsmouth, 1809.

That's all for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll hear a cautionary tale about stealing skulls.  In the meantime, here's a fun cover.


Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



All I’ll say is, 1913 was a lousy year for Halloween festivities.  On November 1 of that year, the “Arkansas Democrat” gave a roundup of the body count:

Chicago, Nov. 1.-Two boys are dead because of Halloween pranks played here last night. While trying to pull down an arc light, Morgan Campbell, fifteen years old, came in contact with a charged wire and was instantly electrocuted. Tomaso La Quinto died in a hospital from injuries received when he was knocked down by a fire department wagon which was answering a false alarm some joker had turned in.

Oklahoma City, Nov. 1-A Halloween prank was responsible for the near. death of M.L. Turner, president of the Western National Bank, Judge R. F. Loofburrow of the Supreme Court; C. A. Galbraith of the Supreme Court Commission, Attorney E. E. Blake and a chauffeur last night. The five men were riding north in a speeding automobile on Classen boulevard when the machine crashed into a telephone pole which Halloween merrymakers had laid across the boulevard. M.L. Turner was picked up unconscious 100 feet from where the machine struck the pole. The other occupants of the car were badly shaken. Turner will recover.  The machine was wrecked. 

Chicago, Nov. 1.-Mrs. Hulda Ewart, fifty-two years of age, and her daughter, Mrs. Alma Stenerson, aged thirty-two, both widows, died of heart disease last night. The daughter died at a Halloween party within half an hour after being taken ill.  The mother, notified of her illness, started to join her and dropped dead on the street corner.

Knoxville, Tenn., Nov. 1-Walter Lane, seventeen years old, was shot and killed last night as the result of a Halloween prank. A number of boys had placed a wagon upon a street car track on Third avenue. When the car approached the trolley was removed from the wire and the motorman and conductor with passengers pulled the wagon from the track. Subsequently someone fired a pistol and Lane fell mortally wounded. The motorman and conductor of the cars were arrested and placed in jail.  They deny having fired the shot. A pistol was found in a sandbox inside the car.

Kansas City, Nov. 1.- A boy's Halloween prank last night caused trouble for the police and the fire department. He spied a telephone cable spool in the street. A little block of wood held it from rolling downhill. The boy waited until he was sure there were no policemen watching then removed the block. The cable spool started slowly, but as the great cylinder, six feet in diameter and weighing a thousand pounds, rolled on its momentum increased.

Just before it reached Twelfth street, which was crowded with motor cars and pedestrians, it was traveling thirty miles an hour. Then it crashed against a water plug. The hydrant was snapped off at the base and the rushing water shot into the door of a saloon. The water flowed down the street, which was crowded with motor cars.  It took the fire and water departments two hours to stop the flood and restore order.

This Friday, it might be wisest to just stay at home and eat all the candy yourself.

Monday, October 27, 2025

A Murder on Halloween Night

As Halloween is this week, it seems appropriate to look at an unsolved crime that seems straight out of a seasonal horror movie.

57-year-old Myrtle Morgan of Chattanooga, Tennessee, led a quiet, modest life.  She had been married for years to George Morgan, although he had not resided in their home for some years.  George had suffered injuries while fighting in World War One that eventually required long-term professional care.  For the past ten years, he was a patient at Murfreesboro Veterans Hospital, while Myrtle, who had apparently never worked, subsisted on George’s small disability payments from the military.  Myrtle lived with her daughter, Jacy, and Jacy’s husband Price Stephens, whom everyone called “Buster.”  She also had a son, Jarvis, who was in the military, but had been visiting her on leave.

On the evening of October 31, 1953, Myrtle was alone in the house.  Jacy and Jarvis had taken Price’s nine-year-old sister Betty and Betty’s friend Carolyn to go roller-skating.  Price was having dinner with a neighbor.  Just after 7 p.m., Myrtle phoned a friend for a casual chat.  As the women were talking, Myrtle suddenly said. “Wait a minute.  I heard a noise.  I think it’s Buster’s dirty-faced cat.”

Myrtle put down the receiver to investigate the sound, but she never returned to the phone.  After some minutes went by without Myrtle replying to her friend’s increasingly anxious shouts to her, the woman told her daughter to monitor the phone while she went to a neighbor’s house to ask police to do a welfare check.  However, soon after she left, Myrtle’s phone went dead.

As the police were arriving at Myrtle’s home, Price returned from his dinner.  After officers explained why they were there, Price tried opening the front door, but it was locked from within.  He was finally able to enter the home through an unlatched window, after which he was able to let police in through the front door.

They found an overturned chair in the living room (which was also Myrtle’s bedroom.)  The phone, which was in its cradle, was ringing.  When Price answered it, he heard the voice of Myrtle’s friend, anxious to know what was going on.  Price told her they didn’t know yet, and hung up.  When they reached the kitchen, they found Myrtle’s dead body on the floor.

"Chattanooga Times," November 1, 1953, via Newspapers.com


Myrtle was lying on her back, with a quilt over the body.  Although her dress and underclothing were badly torn, there was no sign she had been sexually assaulted.  However, all sorts of other brutalities had been inflicted on the poor woman.  Her nose and other facial bones had been badly broken, along with her jaw.  Her skull had been fractured badly enough to cause a brain hemorrhage.  There was a hole the size of a 32 caliber bullet through her upper jaw, which initially led to the assumption that she had been shot.  However, there was no exit wound, and no bullets were found in her body, leaving the cause of this wound uncertain.  Although it was theorized that Myrtle had been attacked with some sort of blunt instrument, the murder weapon was never determined.  It was believed that she had died sometime between 7:17--the time when she told her friend about the noise--and 7:25.  Investigators speculated that the murderer entered the home through the unlocked front door and secured the door’s sliding lock.  When Myrtle encountered the intruder, she was chased down the hallway into the kitchen, where the attack took place.  The killer then exited through a broken rear window.  A dresser in Myrtle’s living room/bedroom had been ransacked, although it was unknown what, if anything, had been taken from it.

This proved to be one of those particularly unsettling murders where investigators were utterly unable to come up with a motive for the crime, let alone a suspect.  (It didn’t help matters that the police failed to protect the home, allowing a large crowd of trick-or-treating looky-loos to spend a particularly morbid Halloween gawking at the murder scene.)  No one who knew Myrtle had any idea why someone would want to bludgeon her to death.  All the known burglars in the area were investigated, but nothing was found linking any of them to the killing.  In the weeks before the murder, there had been five rape or attempted rape cases in the area, so it was naturally suspected that this assailant (who appears to have never been caught) was also responsible for Myrtle’s murder, but that theory was fated to remain unproven.

Myrtle’s husband and children have long since passed on, but in the Chattanooga area, at least, this chilling mystery is still very much alive.

Friday, October 24, 2025

Weekend Link Dump

 



Welcome to this week's Link Dump!

Let the show begin!





The hazards of Victorian steam rollers.

When sunken living rooms were a fad.  Personally, I hated them.

Kathy Bates' grandfather and the mummy of John Wilkes Booth.

Let's face it, Lt. Columbo was a dirty cop.  Meh, if we're talking '70s crime dramas, give me James Rockford any day.

The king of the ghost-hunters. 

Decoding a mysterious writing system.

The woman who saved art from the Nazis.

The mystery of Egypt's "Area 51."

The Ragged School Museum.

The town that was terrorized by particularly vicious poison-pen letters.

A ghostly mother-child reunion.

What we know--and don't know--about scarecrows.

The Snow Axe murders.

Two very different Georgian-era childhoods.

The burning of Norfolk, Virginia in 1776.

A controversial Australian geoglyph.

New research about Egypt's Karnak Temple.

A lost city in Mexico.

The church that includes a depiction of Albert Einstein.

The origins of the Hundred Years' War.

The wanderings of Robert Louis Stevenson.

In other news, 31/Atlas is still weird.

No doubt you'll be pleased to hear that scientists are spending all that sweet grant money on cooking spaghetti.  (It just so happens that I'll be making spaghetti this Sunday.  Maybe I should start a Go-Fund-Me.  In the name of research.)

The man who gained fame by walking on his head.

The witches of Dogtown.

The first Canadian novel.

A butchery in Baltimore.

That's all for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at a murder on Halloween.  In the meantime, if Joe Rogan is ever reincarnated as a cat, this will be the result.



Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Since we’re into the Halloween season, it seems appropriate to share this bit of spooky folklore from the “Baltimore Sun,” October 31, 1998:

It's that time of the year when a barking dog late at night is listened to a little more closely than usual. 

Eerie shadows give a start and the mere rattling of shutters by the wind forces the mind to race ahead and contemplate things that go bump in the night. It's Halloween, that time of the year when regiments of costumed ghosts, goblins, witches and Frankensteins take to the streets to go trick or treating or crowd into church halls for parties.

But just as much a part of Halloween is the telling, and re-telling, of the carefully crafted ghost stories. Despite the narrators' propensity for hyperbole, these tales from the crypt and the nether world of restless spirits, can still raise the hair on the listener's neck no matter what their age. Two Baltimore chestnuts that no doubt will be whispered around darkened rooms and flickering fireplaces tonight will be the tale of the blond hitchhiker named Sequin and the tale of "Black Aggie," the statue that once marked the grave of Gen. Felix Angus and his wife in Druid Ridge Cemetery near Pikesville.

Along Route 40 East, if you should see a tall, pretty blond hitchhiker wearing a low-cut, blue-sequined cocktail dress, don't be surprised. 

“She is the subject of one of Baltimore's best-known tales of the supernatural and she has been with us for many years," reported The Evening Sun in 1976. It was a tale told by an East Baltimore Sunday-school teacher about a "thin blithe girl with violet eyes and blond hair," who used to wait outside of church and pick up teen-age boys. "The whole community gossiped about her and people said she was completely immoral," said the newspaper. One Sunday, she sat in the last pew because she heard that the pastor was distributing clothes for the poor and her dress was soiled and old. As the pastor opened a barrel and removed a blue-sequined party dress, she walked down the aisle and removed it from his hands.  "Thereafter, she never wore anything but that party dress, in all kinds of weather night and day," said the newspaper.

Later that winter, the woman was found frozen to death on a back street wearing the blue-sequined dress. Ten years later, two City College students were driving to a dance along Route 40 when they spotted an attractive blond girl wearing a blue cocktail dress trimmed in sequins. They stopped and picked her up and took her to the dance. She told everyone her name was Sequin and she was never without a dance partner. After the dance, the two boys drove her back to her East Baltimore home.

When she complained of the chilly night air, one of the boys removed his topcoat and draped it over her shoulders. Forgetting the coat, they returned to the house the next day and were greeted by an elderly woman. "Sequin? You must be old friends--she's been dead 10 years," she told the stunned boys. Thinking they had the wrong address, the woman reassured them that it was indeed the right address and a girl nicknamed Sequin once had lived there. "Her real name was Betty, and she's buried in the old cemetery six blocks away," she said. Entering the cemetery, they quickly found the young woman's grave.

“They found the small stone where the woman said it would be. On it was engraved simply 'Betty.' And folded across the mound in front of the stone was the boy's topcoat," reported The Evening Sun. 

Da-da! Cue the spooky organ music.

As early as 1950, newspaper accounts related tales of nocturnal visits by teen-agers to "Black Aggie," a copy by sculptor Pausch of Augustus St. Gaudens' "Grief," which marks the grave of Mrs. Henry Adams in Washington's Rock Creek Cemetery. 

"There are lots of stories about it," a Pikesville policeman told The Evening Sun in 1950. "The kids say its eyes shine in the dark, and things like that.  But that’s a lot of who-struck-John.” 

Or was it? Before Angus' descendants removed "Black Aggie" from the cemetery and donated her in 1967 to the National Collection of Fine Arts at the Smithsonian Institution, a visit to the "jet-black, shrouded angel that kept her grief-stricken watch over the lonely cemetery" was almost obligatory for 1950s-era Baltimore teens. 

Via Newspapers.com

 

"Unseen by the visitors, her eyes glowed briefly red, and a beckoning hand moved slightly on the arm of her throne. For the intruders, it was a rite of passage: Anyone brave enough to spend the midnight hour in Black Aggie's lap was man enough to join their fraternity, and the new-brother-to-be joked bravely as his companions returned to their houses, leaving him in Aggie's chilly embrace." 

Other legends claimed that no fertilizer known to mankind could grow grass in her shadow. "Persons who have returned the gaze of those glowing eyes have been struck blind; young mothers who walked too close by at midnight have suffered stillbirths; countless strollers have quickened their step at the sound of wails of pain and clanking chains," reported The Sun. 

John Hitchcock, who was born and raised in the cemetery and whose father had been superintendent there, told The Sun in 1966: "I have patrolled the cemetery hundreds of times and walked right by the statue at midnight. It has never moved or rolled its eyes or done anything unusual." 

The reason the grass wouldn't grow, he explained, was due to the hordes of teen-agers who trampled it.

"Anyone who goes out there to look at that grave at midnight is out of his ever lovin' mind," he told the newspaper. 

Or were they? 

Da-da! Cue the spooky organ music.