"...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, August 3, 2022

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



It's time for another round of Anomalous Falls!  The "Jackson Clarion-Ledger," September 11, 1956:

MERIDIAN-P. F. Watkins, Meridian, Route 4, said here Saturday that during a light rain and a dead calm, a sweet-gum tree limb, 15 feet long and eight inches in diameter, fell into his yard Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. Weather Bureau reports that no stormy conditions were in the state at that time. 

Watkins is the father of H. C. (Mike) Watkins, Meridian attorney. No sweet gum tree is growing in that section. The limb had the appearance of being twisted off a tree, indicating that a heavy wind of cyclonic proportions, possibly hundreds or more miles away, twisted off the limb, whirled it into the sky and carried it until the strength of the wind died down and the limb dropped to earth.

I can't say I find that explanation terribly convincing, but it doesn't seem like anyone came up with a better theory.

Monday, August 1, 2022

The Strange Case of John Gordon Iverson

"Arizona Gazette," January 12, 1991, via Newspapers.com



Bizarre details are a staple of missing-persons cases.  However, it’s not every day you come across a disappearance that is as utterly bonkers from beginning to end as the following mystery.  Buckle up, this one is quite a wild ride.

John Gordon Iverson was a talented electrical engineer and inventor.  His company, Electron Kinetics, produced highly-regarded audio amplification systems.  Unfortunately, this genius had a dark side.  He was a heavy drinker, which hardly improved his already difficult personality.  He displayed a crude prejudice against minority groups.  He was in the habit of telling colorful, and completely fictitious, stories about his personal life and career.  Iverson was, in short, an irritating, perhaps even disturbing man.

In 1991, the 42-year-old Iverson was living in Lake Havasu City, Arizona with one Kathleen Munro.  He and Munro had married in 1987, but quickly divorced, supposedly for financial reasons which were never publicly explained.  After the divorce, Iverson put all his assets in Munro’s name, for equally obscure reasons.  That move of his may--or may not--have been a critical factor in later developments.

Iverson had his problems.  He and Munro had had some serious quarrels, which led him to contemplate leaving her.  According to some reports, he owed the IRS back taxes and his business was being threatened with an audit.  However, on the surface, at least, the couple’s lives seemed relatively quiet.

On the evening of January 4, 1991, Jack Weber, a machinist who had worked with Iverson for the past few months, visited the couple’s home.  According to Munro’s later story, he came by to drop off a project he had been working on for Iverson.  The engineer was not at home at the time, so Munro--who was Iverson’s bookkeeper--gave Weber a $1,000 check for his work.  A short time later, Iverson arrived home.  Munro, who was suffering from the flu, told him she had paid Weber, and then went to bed.  When she woke up at around 9:30 p.m., she found that both men were gone.  

As she was walking back to her bedroom.  Jack Weber entered the house, wearing gloves and holding a gun.  He told her menacingly that he had Iverson bound and gagged in his, Weber’s, van.  He asked how much money Iverson had in the bank, and ordered Munro to give him whatever cash she had in the house.

Munro gave Weber $4,000, and wrote out a check for $2,500.  She made some deliberate mistakes while drafting the check, in the hope that someone at the bank would realize something was amiss.  Then, she managed to escape by dashing into one of the bedrooms, locking the door behind her, and fleeing the house through another door which led outside.  She then ran screaming to a neighbor’s house, where she called the police.  By the time officers arrived on the scene, the van with Weber and Iverson in it was long gone.  Iverson's motor home was still in his driveway.  Police found that a table inside it had been damaged, and there were the remains of a small spot of blood on the carpet.  An effort had been made to clean it.  However, it is unknown whose blood it was, or if the stain was a recent one.



Weber’s whereabouts were initially a mystery.  He wrote to his wife telling her to collect his van, which he had left in a parking lot about ten miles from his Las Vegas house, but the postmark on the letter was unreadable.  When police searched the van, there were no signs of any sort of violence having taken place in it.

On April 23, nearly four months after he and Iverson vanished, Weber, facing charges of kidnapping and armed robbery, turned himself in to the authorities.  And he had quite the alibi.  Weber insisted that, far from being the villain of the piece, he was the real victim.  Munro and Iverson had colluded in a plot to frame him.

According to Weber, Iverson had asked his assistance in building a new type of gun; one that didn’t require live ammunition.  He agreed.  When Weber went to Iverson’s house on January 4 with his prototype for the gun, he was expecting to be paid $8,400 that he was owed for his work.  After Munro wrote him a check for $1,000, he explained that this wouldn’t be enough.  He said that Munro seemed uneasy, but she didn’t say anything.  After Iverson arrived home at 6:30 p.m., Munro went off to her bedroom in silence.

Soon after this, Iverson got a phone call.  He afterwards told Weber that it was from a prospective buyer of their gun.  Weber refused to give his prototype to Iverson until he was paid in full.  While the two men examined the gun, which was in the back seat of Weber’s van, Iverson proposed that he give Weber $2,500 immediately, and the rest in a week, after their would-be buyer had a chance to see the gun.  Weber agreed, leaving Iverson in the van while he went to collect his money.  He said that Munro asked him to give the $1,000 check back, and she wrote a new one for $2,500.  Weber suggested that as a receipt, they simply change the amount on the $1,000 invoice he had left on the kitchen table.

They began to walk to the kitchen, when suddenly Weber realized that Munro was no longer behind him.  Then he heard her standing in the driveway, screaming.

Weber returned to the van and asked Iverson what was going on.  Iverson claimed to have no idea, but that he and Munro had been having “problems.”  He suggested that he and Weber should just leave for a while to give Munro a chance to cool down.  Iverson collected a box from his garage and asked Weber to drive him to Bullhead City, 65 miles away.  Along the way, Iverson made a phone call, which he said was to Munro.  He claimed she told him that the police had come to their house, but she sent them away.

Weber and Iverson spent the night in the van, and tested out their new gun in the Arizona desert.  (A curious little detail: Weber said they fired the gun using ball bearings, which they carefully retrieved when they had finished.)  Weber stated that while the weapon needed more fine-tuning, it did work.  That day, Weber called his wife.  She gave him the unwelcome news that the FBI was looking for him, because they thought he had kidnapped Iverson.  Weber explained to her what had happened, and that Iverson was fine.  After Weber talked to his wife, Iverson made a call, again allegedly to Munro.  Iverson reported to Weber that when Munro was unable to find Iverson, she had police issue the kidnapping warrant.

Weber said he wanted to immediately return to Lake Havasu City to straighten everything out, but Iverson declined.  He pointed out that he was already in trouble for violating his probation (in 1990, Iverson had been convicted of stealing telegraph wire,) and he wanted to talk to a lawyer he knew in Phoenix before going home.

After spending another night in the van, Iverson called his attorney friend.  He set up a meeting with him, which would take place in five days.  They hid the gun and its blueprints somewhere near Laughlin, Arizona, and drove to Phoenix.  Then, they went their separate ways, agreeing to meet again on the day of their appointment with the lawyer.

Weber drove back to his home, packed a suitcase, and left.  He lived in his van for the next several days.  He drove back to Phoenix, but Iverson never turned up at their pre-arranged meeting place.  When he went back to the place where they had hidden the gun and blueprints, he found that they were now gone.  When he realized that Iverson and Munro had tricked him, he went into hiding at his home, in the hope that the FBI would find Iverson and realize that Weber had not kidnapped him.  His wife eventually persuaded him to surrender to the police.

The police realized they had a fine mess on their hands.  Their only evidence regarding Iverson’s disappearance were two statements which were not only completely contradictory, but equally outlandish.  Munro failed a lie detector test, which she blamed on the Prozac and Valium she was taking.  When asked to take a second test, she insisted on using a polygraph examiner of her own choosing.  She passed this test, but police considered it to be unreliable.  As police were unable to find any clue about where Iverson was and what had happened to him, all charges against Weber were eventually dropped.  Less than two months after Iverson vanished, Munro liquidated all her assets--or, you might say, Iverson’s assets--and moved to California.  These actions of hers raised a few eyebrows, especially among Iverson’s relatives, most of whom were inclined to doubt her version of events.

To date, John Iverson has never been seen again, alive or dead.  As for Munro and Weber, at least one of them was lying, and their stories are so equally weird it seems highly possible that they both were--to use the formal legal expression--telling porkie pies.  But then, the question becomes, “Why?”  What were they hiding?  What really happened on the night of January 4?

Friday, July 29, 2022

Weekend Link Dump

 

"The Witches' Cove," Follower of Jan Mandijn


A reminder from the Strange Company staff that if you visit the beach this summer, remember to dress appropriately.




Where the hell was Moses buried?

How "Bad Tom" Smith certainly lived up to his name.

A 2,000 year old earthquake detector.

I really, really hate this trend of food companies coming up with perfectly disgusting creations just for the novelty value.

"Somerton Man," one of the internet's favorite mysteries, has probably been identified.

Decoding encrypted personal ads from the 19th century

A modern-day farm turns out to be hosting a medieval complex.

Some unusual reasons for divorce in 1917.

A handy reminder to avoid sleeping with your alarm clock.

Meditation in the Mughal Empire.

Buster the Battleship Cat.

Japan's underwater archaeology.

Fake widowhood for fun and profit.

Painless Parker, showman dentist.

Recreating a 3,200 year old perfume.

Some rediscovered treasures from Britain's past.

Swan Upping on the Thames.

It seems we've been misidentifying Greyfriars Bobby.

The European heatwave of 1540.

Why Hitler and Stalin hated Esperanto.

10 archaeological mysteries.

Ice Age children may have played in sloth footprints.

An assortment of great death scenes.

New revelations about a Neolithic site.

A brief history of British intelligence.

The Great Plains were just too quiet for 19th century settlers.

The life of a washerwoman turned artist's model.

In which a whole lot of people get pushed down stairs.

Charles Dickens' great-granddaughter and the naming of the Australian accent.

1922's Straw Hat Riots.

Victorian exercise machines.

The Great Seed Detective.

Salvaging HMS Royal George.

Peru's Band of Holes.

The Kelvedon Hatch nuclear bunker.

It's claimed that a dead mosquito helped catch a burglar.

If you ever get a time machine, don't bother going to 536 AD.

The Batman of Mesoamerican mythology.

The Coventry Conspiracy.

How statesmen started WWI.

An English renegade in the Ottoman Empire.

How ancient Egypt was affected by an Alaskan volcano.

Nikola Tesla thought that electricity could cure stupid.  Nick, honey, take it from someone who's been around the block a few times: there's nothing that cures stupid.

Doubt, decency, and English witchcraft.

The end of the Scottish clan system.

Warfare in the Mariana Islands.

The world's largest crystal cave.

A terrifying meteor storm in 1907.

Nothing to see here, just a weird line of holes on the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.

Nothing to see here, just a death pool on the bottom of the Red Sea.

Newspapers and the 1950 census.

The Corn Cutter of Broadway.

That time when most bread went to horses.

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at one of the weirder missing-persons cases I've come across.  In the meantime, here's something from 1970s Britain.


Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



This grimly terse news item appeared in the “Asheville Citizen-Times,” June 7, 1922:

FORT MADISON, Ia., June 5.--Up and down the old Santa Fe line engine No. 3403 was known as the hoodoo. 

Engineers, old-timers in the service, shuddered whenever it fell to their lot to pilot "ol' hoodoo" over a division. Trainmen, usually carefree and non-superstitious, always were just a bit worried when 3403 was pulling their train. 

"Ol’ hoodoo” was a good engine as engines go. Engineers admitted that even though they didn't care particularly to be assigned to it.

The reason was that No. 3403 had been responsible for one bad wreck and had several close calls with different engineers at the throttle each time. 

Back in November, 1921, No. 3403 crashed into a freight train at the crossover switch near the south approach to the bridge across the Mississippi here. Both the engineer and fireman were killed.

Engineer James Eaton knew the history of No. 3403. He knew its record. But he disregarded it.

Now, he's dead. Died at the throttle when "ol' hoodoo,” pulling "The Scout" flyer ploughed into the California Limited, head-on. 

And right at the spot where the hoodooed engine had crashed into the freight six months ago and killed its engineer--the crossover switch near the Mississippi bridge. "Ol' hoodoo" also claimed the life of Dewey Taylor, fireman. 

Twelve others were injured. 

But "ol' hoodoo" has made its last run, Nothing remains of the engine now but a heap of junk and the memory among Santa Fe engineers that it claimed the lives of two of their brothers.

Always respect the hoodoo.

Monday, July 25, 2022

Poe and Dumas: The History of a Hoax


[Note: I first published this post on "The World of Edgar Allan Poe" in 2010, but I thought its theme of forgery and general historical monkeyshines was relevant to this blog, as well.]


In 1929, a well-known rare book dealer named Gabriel Wells presented the world with an amazing footnote to history. He announced that during a recent trip to Europe, he acquired a document in the handwriting of Alexandre Dumas. The manuscript gave a detailed account of a time, around 1832, when he had at his Paris residence a strange young house guest named Edgar Allan Poe. Dumas supposedly wrote:
"One day a young American presented himself at my house with an introduction from his fellow-countryman, the famous novelist Fenimore Cooper.

Needless to say I welcomed him with open arms.

His name was Edgar Poe.

From the outset I realized that I had to deal with a remarkable man: two or three remarks which he made on my furniture, the things I had about me, the way my articles of everyday use were strewn about the room, and on my moral and intellectual characteristics, impressed me with their accuracy and truth. On the very first day of our acquaintance I freely proffered my friendship and asked for his. He must certainly have entertained for me a sympathy similar to that I felt for him, for he held out his hand to me and the understanding between us was instantaneous and complete...I offered to let Edgar Poe have two rooms in this house for the duration of his stay in Paris.

...Poe had one curious idiosyncrasy; he liked the night better than the day. Indeed, his love of the darkness amounted to a passion. But the Goddess of Night could not always afford him her shade, and remain with him continually, so he contrived a substitute. As soon as day began to break he hermetically sealed up the windows of his room and lit a couple of candles. In the midst of this pale illumination he worked, or read, or suffered his thoughts to wander in the insubstantial regions of reverie, or else he fell asleep, not being always able to indulge in waking dreams. But as soon as the clock told him that the real darkness had come he would come in for me, take me out with him if I was there, or go forth alone if I was not...In these rambles I could not help remarking with wonder and admiration (though his rich endowment of ideas should have prepared me for it) the extraordinary faculty of analysis exhibited by my friend. He seemed to delight in giving it play, and neglected no opportunity of indulging himself in that pleasure...for him, every man had an open window where his heart was."

And so on, with Poe as part Dupin, part vampire. (This account's obvious resemblance to the opening section of "The Murders In the Rue Morgue" should in itself have been a red flag right from the beginning.)

As may be imagined, Wells' hitherto unknown acquisition caused quite a stir. Poe scholars, always desperately anxious to find means to fill in the many blanks in the poet's biography, were thrilled that they may have been presented with new and exciting information. However, after the first wave of excitement had passed, reality sank in, and the story's manifest improbabilities and impossibilities quickly led them to sadly reject the Dumas story as a hoax. (And for Poe biographers to dismiss a tale as incredible is truly saying something.) In spite of this, the "Poe visited Paris" legend is still repeated as fact here and there (usually on the sort of websites that describe Poe as an international espionage agent who was murdered by the Illuminati.)

In spite of the near-universal dismissal of the story itself, there seems to still be some amount of confusion about whether the manuscript was an odd piece of fiction, but truly written by Dumas, or a particularly demented forgery. This reluctance to dismiss the document as a complete fake is astounding--not only because Dumas was hardly the light-hearted practical joker type, but because of the further history of the man who came up with the strange artifact.

The year after revealing his Dumas story, Gabriel Wells--no doubt flushed with the success of his earlier bombshell--announced his acquisition of another previously undreamed-of addition to Poe lore. He claimed that while in Italy, he had also gained possession of three sketches drawn by Poe, supposedly representing Virginia Clemm, a young Sarah Elmira Royster Shelton, and a self-portrait. According to Wells, he bought them from "an elderly American" living in Genoa, later identified only as a "W. Mills," who was the descendant of a man named Henry O'Reilly, who had been given the drawings by Poe himself. (There is no evidence that Poe ever knew anyone by that name, much less that "O'Reilly" ever even existed.) Despite this rather dodgy provenance, Poe "expert" Thomas O. Mabbott--on the grounds, evidently, of a combination of wishful thinking and gullibility--immediately and enthusiastically pronounced the portraits to be "genuine and of the greatest importance historically." Mabbott gushed, "The self-portrait of Poe is in one way the greatest find of all...It not only represents him in his prime, but the self-portrait is probably the most satisfactory picture we have of him at this period...But the picture one rejoiced most in seeing is the lovely head of Virginia Clemm Poe. It is said that the only other picture that is accessible was made after her death. But here we have her as her husband saw her--a most romantic and tragic lady, the poet's best love."

These drawings, unique in Poe's history, and with a romantic background, garnered even more ecstatic attention than the Dumas manuscript. Wells consigned his little treasures to one of his regular agents, a salesman with an extremely shady reputation named C.B. Randall, who sold them to Poe collector J.K. Lilly for nearly nine thousand dollars--quite a tidy sum for 1931. Unfortunately, as was the case with Wells' earlier revelations, the intoxication caused by the discovery of these works soon gave way to the inevitable painful hangover. Mr. Mills--who had made earlier appearances in Poe circles--had shown himself to be extremely untrustworthy. (During earlier attempts to sell these same drawings, he had given them an entirely different history.) Other Poe scholars indignantly refuted Mabbott's authentication. Lilly himself came to the conclusion that he had been sold a pup, but chose to keep the pictures anyway--perhaps because if he had disposed of them, it would have been too humiliating a confirmation of how well and truly he had been gulled.

As Michael Deas commented in his fascinating book "Portraits and Daguerreotypes of Edgar Allan Poe," "In retrospect, it seems almost inconceivable that all three portraits could have at one time been regarded as authentic drawings by Poe." Deas--a professional in the art world--noted that while Poe was known to have some artistic ability, at least the "self-portrait" (which, incidentally, could scarcely be said to even resemble Poe) was clearly done by someone with formal training. Also, the drawings, as even my untrained and inartistic eye can see, are completely different in style, and are obviously the work of three separate artists.Alleged Poe Self-PortraitWhat is most interesting--and depressingly revealing--about the whole debacle is how not one of the guilty parties involved paid any price for their mistakes and/or crimes. Mabbott was suitably embarrassed by how he had been had--or more importantly, how he had allowed Mr. Lilly to be had--but not too embarrassed to stop presenting himself as an authoritative Poe source. His reputation as an "expert" was in no way diminished by this well-publicized demonstration of his lack of expertise. The shadowy "W. Mills" went on his merry way undisturbed and free to foment further mischief. According to one source, Lilly had spoken of bringing criminal charges against Randall (both he and Wells had evidently known early on about the dubious background of the portraits but chose to simply keep that knowledge to themselves,) but if so, it came to nothing. Wells continued to buy and sell valuable books and manuscripts, with apparently no one being the least troubled by his adventures in historical shenanigans. The honorary doctorate Rutgers University awarded him in 1935 lauded "his importance as a bookman, author, philanthropist, international authority on rare books, and, above all, a man of integrity." Comment seems superfluous, let alone probably actionable. Suffice to say that I myself would feel extremely uneasy about any document, particularly if it related to Poe, that ever passed through this gentleman's hands--and quite a few of them did.

The spurious drawings of Virginia and Miss Royster still pop up frequently on the Internet (including that vast online horror show, Wikipedia,) as authentic portraits--which just goes to show you can't keep a good fraud down.Elmira Royster forgeryvirginia poe forgery
And so it goes in the World of Poe.

Friday, July 22, 2022

Weekend Link Dump

 

"The Witches' Cove," Follower of Jan Mandijn


This week's Link Dump is hosted by a medieval cat who personifies the true Strange Company Spirit.


Rock art from a mysterious ancient civilization.

A burial ground with an eclectic clientele.

Yet another murder done to avoid a marriage.

Some Viking jewelry was mysteriously left at a museum.

The world's oldest papyrus and the Great Pyramid.

The patron saints of mice, cats, and thunderstorms.

War in the Mariana Islands.

Mensur: the sport for people who want to feel like they've been put through a paper shredder.

The birth of "kitchen sink realism."

Considering what the world's been like lately, I think this has already happened.

Thanks to the heat, Chatsworth's historic gardens have made something of a comeback.

The American Civil War's first civilian casualty.

A magic mirror that contains a hidden image.

I'm interested in food history, so I enjoyed watching how to prepare dinner, 1807 style.  (And it will give you a fresh appreciation for modern kitchens.)

  


Some unusual medieval burials.

A cat's dog days.

An April Fool's prank involving a volcano.

When newspapers had "society pages."

How a lost hammer led to the discovery of Roman treasure.

A strangely famous bathtub.

There is an Antiquities Theft Task Force, which is a pretty cool thing to put on a business card.

The U.S. Navy's first major victory.

How vintage newspapers covered astrology.

The link between cheese and witchcraft.  There is definitely something magical about a really good mac & cheese.



I don't know why scientists are surprised to learn that bees are really smart.  But, then, I've noticed that a lot of scientists wouldn't know common sense if it hit them over the head with a two-by-four.

I confess my unpopular true-crime opinion: I don't think Constance Kent was guilty.



Why ships are often painted red on the bottom.

The birth of Atlantic City.

A British officer in late 19th century Sudan.


A husband and wife suffer mysterious deaths.

A modern history of the Loch Ness Monster.

A modern history of plane hijackings.


Budget beauty tips from the 1960s.



The history of nutmeg.

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at a historical forgery case involving Alexandre Dumas and Edgar Allan Poe.  In the meantime, here's a song from the late 1960s that is so...late 1960s.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



“Anomalous falls from the sky” stories are always fun, and the following is one of the better examples I’ve seen lately.  From the “New York Daily News,” August 19, 1950:

Five ironworkers atop the Empire State Building, 1,250 feet above the ground, fled for cover yesterday when they were struck by a barley storm. 

Experts in the grain, meteorological, navigation, and chemical fields were dubious at first, but became interested later. They were at a loss to explain the strange occurrence. 

The mysterious downpour of grain started at 10 A.M., two hours after the workers had begun their job of clearing away a stainless steel platform to make room for the new television tower. 

Bill Dunn, 30, of New Haven, felt something strike his face. Then pellets started to bounce off the metal flooring. 

"I think it's starting to hail," shouted Dunn. 

The foreman, Al Johnson, of 220-13 Jamaica Ave., Queens Village, Queens, peered at the hot, misty sky and ordered the men off the exposed platform. 

Within a couple of minutes the platform was carpeted with barley. Here and there were kernels of corn.

The fall lasted five minutes. It ended as suddenly as it started. 

Ernest J. Christie, meteorologist at the U. S. Weather Bureau, said that the slight winds prevailing at that time could not have carried the grain. At 20,000 feet, however, were winds of gale force. They were blowing from the direction of the Great Plains.

At LaGuardia Field it was indicated that the grain apparently was not loosed from a plane. The control tower at the field said that at the time of the barley downpour, air traffic was shut down, except for outgoing planes. The planes which left did not pass over the midtown area. 

Chemists said that local breweries using barley could not be blamed. While barley is blown into the air during processing at the breweries, it is always in the form of dust. The barley that fell on the Empire State tower was whole kernels.