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Blogging Villisca

The documentary filmmakers who recently The_axemade what I regard as the the best historic true crime documentary ever, Villisca: Living With a Mystery, will now explore that mystery online in a new blog devoted to the case.

I've already added it to my list of favorite blogs in the theme (at right).

It will be interesting to follow Kelly and Tammy Rundle's updates online and to see what light can be shed down the dark trails of this most enduring and now well-known case.

Crime historian Edgar Epperley, who has studied the case for years [read the Clews interview], recently wrote an article about the murder weapon, The Odyssey of the Axe, for the Villisca Historical Society's website.

One day soon (hint, hint!) there may be a new book about the case containing all the latest theories and evidence and opinions. Meanwhile, I'll go back to the blog for more of the slow unraveling of the Villisca mystery.

Criminal History Illustrated: Google Earth

Google Earth Community is a collection of Google Earth users who post Google Earth images of interesting places on the planet. They also post historical maps and images and links to particular locations as they're seen today.

And what do you know, some murder fanciers have tagged historical sites of interest under the category of History Illustrated, so you can do some true crime travel or even investigation from your desktop. There are thousands of images tagged, but let's narrow it to some of our favorite subjects --

The house where Jesse James was shot and the James homestead

Elizabeth Bathory's Castle

Villisca axe murder house

The scene of Van Gogh's murder

The Clutter farmhouse, In Cold Blood

Pickton's Pig Farm

Site of HH Holmes' murder castle

Photos of 8763 Wonderland Ave., Los Angeles

Smuttynose Island

The John Sowden House, Los Angles - Where Steve Hodel says his father murdered Elizabeth Short.

The 1997 North Hollywood Bank Robbery and Urban Gun Battle

A Jack the Ripper site (one of many)

Fanny Adams murder site

The Mountain Meadows Massacre

Bodom murder scene - Finland's most infamous case of all time.

Scene of Swedish PM Olof Palme's murder

Evelyn Dick, Canada's Torso Case - a beautiful woman, a bizarre murder

and so on.

and my favorite... what grows in the Garden at the Edgar Allan Poe Museum?

Clews Interviews Crime Historian Dr. Edgar Epperly

Dr. Edgar V. Epperly first heard of the mass murder in Villisca, Iowa when he was a child, and began studying it in earnest in college. "It may sound peculiar," he once said, but he's spent the ensuing five decades enthralled by this murder case, interviewing witnesses, examining the evidence, and writing numerous articles about the baffling mystery. Ed

Dr. Epperly, recently retired as a professor of education from Luther College in Iowa, is now writing a book as well, this after consulting with filmmakers for the making of a documentary about the murders, "Villisca: Living With a Mystery" (see the Clews review of this excellent film).

In sum, eight people, six of them children, were murdered in their beds in the middle of the night in June 1912 in a small Iowa town. Three suspects emerged, but none was convicted and the case was never solved.

Clews recently had a chance to ask Dr. Epperly a few questions about the murders in Villisca, our need to know, and obsession in general. Here's the Q&A.

You have studied the murders in Villisca for many years now. There were, as you know, three chief suspects in the murders, and several inquiries, public and private, civil and criminal. After studying so much evidence for so long, do you draw any firm conclusions on who may or may not have been the truly guilty party?

Over the years I have oscillated between the serial killer theory and the belief that Rev. Kelly was the murderer.

When you link the great risks Kelly ran and efforts he expended to see young women in the nude to Lena Stillinger's semi-nude body, left in an obscene pose, it seems obvious Kelly was the murderer.

Just when I have convinced myself Kelly had a sufficiently psychopathic personality to kill everyone in the house so he could look his fill, I reread the accounts of the Colorado Springs, Monmouth, IL, Ellsworth and Paola, KS, murders, and doubts creep in. They are all mainline railroad towns with their murder houses but a stone's throw from the tracks. In all cases, the killer came with no weapon in hand, relying on providence or the devil to guide him to a suitable instrument carelessly left in the back yard. All but one murder occurred on a weekend and the scenes with their covered bodies peacefully lying in bed cry out for the same wandering railroad killer.

Consequently, like a pendulum, I slowly swing back and forth always keeping one irresolute foot in each camp. Unsatisfying, but the best I can do at this time.

Anticipating your readers' reactions, I have thrown away a lifetime trying to place Kelly in one or another of the murder sites at the crucial time.

The one conclusion I do confidently draw is that F. F. Jones, Villisca banker and state senator, was not guilty. He lacked motive, did not have a sufficiently disturbed personality to contemplate the act, and his supposed hired killer William Mansfield can prove with sworn testimony and documentary evidence he was in Montgomery, IL, working on the railroad on the night of the murder.

Do you think there is still evidence that might yet come to light?

I don't think there is a huge cache of records hiding somewhere but there are some missing pieces. I have never seen a transcript of the July 1916 Grand Jury proceedings which considered William Mansfield's guilt or innocence.

The September, 1917, transcript of Rev. Kelly's trial rests in the Montrgomery County courthouse as an untranscribed, unreadable shorthand document. If we can translate Egyptian hieroglyphics, I am sure the Kelly trial shorthand code can be broken but no one has had the money or interest to do so up to this time.

There also are records of Montgomery County paying for photographs taken in conjunction with the original investigation. These seem to have been lost. Perhaps they will surface some day.

If you could find any one piece of evidence that eludes you, what would it be, and what light do you think it would shed on the case?

In December of 1913, Rev. Kelly was preaching in Winner, SD. He advertised in the Omaha World Herald for a stenographer and received an inquiry from a recent high school graduate from Council Bluffs, IA. He told her she would be fine but he wanted her to type in the nude. Postal authorities send him fake letters and thinking he was corresponding with an eager 18 year old girl, his answers became increasingly salacious until he was arrested for sending obscene material through the mail (sounds like the current internet cases, doesn't it?)

During his trial Kelly's letters were introduced in evidence. When I accessed the transcript of this trial, the letters were acknowledged but, in the words of the judge, "Too obscene and disgusting to be spread upon this record." I would like to read those letters because they might reveal Kelly's sexual fetishes and desires which one could relate to the Villisca murder scene.

What do you suppose explains your obsession with this old murder case? What makes us want to know? What makes certain cases "haunt us," as John Douglas puts it?

Growing up in southern Iowa, I heard about the case as a youngster. Later in college, two friends and I, writing a joint term paper, made our initial visit to Villisca and I found myself "hooked by the topic." There always seem to be someone else to interview, another town to visit, more newspaper to review, and additional court documents to locate.

I suppose there are deeper elements in my personality which might shed light on my "obsession" with such a heinous crime but I have never gone down those dark roads in search of an explanation. Growing up in a grocery store, I always enjoyed working in Dad's butcher shop--let's see Freud make something out of that!

When working on the recent film, did you have any trepidation about it when you first heard of the project -- any concern about how you or the case or the town would be portrayed on film?

In 1992, I received a call in my office at Luther College. A disembodied voice introduced himself as Kelly Rundle who, with his wife Tammy, owned a Hollywood documentary film company, Fourth Wall Productions. They had stumbled upon the Villisca murder and wanted to speak to me about consulting on their planned film.

It is difficult for me to ignore anything about the murder so I readily agreed to meet with them to discuss the project. Neither side of this discussion knew each other from a load of coal. We both took a shot in the dark, based on our reading of each other during that initial meeting in a Decorah café.

Now 15 years later, it seems from my point of view to have been a good bargain.

What'd you think of the final product, Villisca, Living with a Mystery?

I couldn't be more pleased. The Rundles have treated a complex, sensational topic in a mature, serious manner. They let the story speak for itself drawing deep meaning from a seemingly meaningless act.

Are you planning a book about the case? Will it be the first non-fiction account of the Villisca axe murders? Are there other books in print about the similar and possibly related axe murders in the US Midwest in the 1910s/20s?

There is a book in print entitled Villisca by Roy Marshall. It is a serious study of the case. Mr. Marshall who grew up in southwest Iowa believes Rev. Kelly was the killer. The Rundles and I are working on a book-length study of the case. With their photographic file, the rotogravure section alone will make it an attractive item. I personally have no agent and largely rely on the Rundles to handle such matters.

I know of no books dealing specifically with the Midwest ax murders that have been connected to the Villisca case. Using Murder, a scholarly study of serial killers, discusses Villisca and its companion murders along with more contemporary cases.

Have you always studied true crime cases?

Not really, my interest in true crime is quite specialized. I have read everything I could lay my hands on regarding Villisca and its potential sister crimes. I have casually inspected some 25 other murders from the first two decades of the 20th century because it had been suggested they might be included in the Villisca series. In my opinion none of them qualify.

Several years ago, I did a modest amount of reading in the litereature surrounding Jack the Ripper and Lizzie Borden. Both of these cases share a similar literary problem with Villisca. Their climactic event occurs at the beginning of the tale and there is no satisfying solution at its end. I wanted to see how authors handled this problem as they discussed Saucy Jack and Lizzie.

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For more:

Visit the Villisca Emporium

See Dr. Epperly on Catherine Crier Live on YouTube

See the Lamplight Q&A at the Murder House on YouTube

Interesting True Crime Links

A well-written account of a true crime has twice the chilling impact of fiction.

--Time Magazine, 1955

The Makers of Villisca Movie Coming to TV Crime historian Edgar Epperly and filmmaker Kelly Rundle will appear on CourtTV's "Catherine Crier Live" Tuesday, Nov. 21 to discuss their terrific true crime documentary Villisca: Living With A Mystery. I thought very highly of that film and look forward to seeing their appearance. In the meantime, they've posted an article by Dr. Epperly on the film's official website that explains why the murder of a family in 1912 impacted so many lives.

If you happen to live near Iowa, the movie is being played on Iowa Public TV Sunday, Nov. 19 at 3 p.m. and Nov. 26 at 10 p.m. Get a sneak preview at YouTube.

Pretty Young Thing killed in Pinup – uh, Holdup Our mainstream media strongly prefers its rape and murder victims to be young, white, middle-class, and gorgeous. This is not a new phenomenon; Susan Brownmiller, who wrote "The Police, the Press, and Roseann Quinn," found this to be true in her analysis of New York tabloids circa 1978:

Women who die violently in New York City and who fall into the category of young, white and beautiful are memorialized in tabloid headlines and story copy that attests to their physical appeal to men, whether or not their physical appeal was actually related to the crime.

I'll add that the New York City press has always eroticized violence against women. When a case actually does allow the city's reporters to legitimately dwell on sex, they've done so with gusto. My favorite example: the murder of Helen Jewett. She was very beautiful and a prostitute and murdered and it was gruesome, and the New York media slobbered all over itself. This was, by the way, 170 years ago.

Explains historian Patricia Cline Cohen (who wrote a book about the case) in an article entitled "The Mystery of Helen Jewett: Romance Fiction and The Eroticization of Violence":

A New York City prostitute named Helen Jewett died in 1836 when an ax crashed down on her head three times and cracked her skull; her bed was then set on fire by the killer. Seven hours later her half-burned body was subjected to a full autopsy directed by the city coroner, right in the room where her murder took place. It must have been a fairly gruesome scene.

Yet something about this particular murder captured the fancy of New York newsmen, and their insistent coverage of the crime produced a public sensation that quickly spread the length and breadth of the nation...

Read the rest here.

Once you're dead, everyone owns your likeness. Or so it seems. And if you were a prostitute, one of those girls (or boys) who sold it, then everyone owns your full, um, unedited likeness, in life and/or death. Or so it seems if you can judge solely by the "16 PAGES OF SHOCKING PHOTOS!" that appear in all of my favorite paperbacks.

Count on Him For an Opinion District Attorney Josh Marquis writes a blog about the justice system, politics, and the media, with a piquant prosecutorial bent. If you like a strong mixture of zingers with a dash of Nancy Grace zeal, check out his archives.

A Pop Quiz Here's a website that has several fun true crime quizzes. Better than yoga, I say. I got only 4 right out of ten questions about Madeline Smith and must now assign myself some Roughead rereading. But I know my Lizzie Borden.... TTFN.

More on Villisca; Murder in Fiction

More about the Villisca Mystery The terrific documentary created by filmmakers Kelly and Tammy Rundle (right) Pub_pic_01_small_1about the 1912 axe murders in Iowa (see the Clews review) has renewed interest in the old mystery.

Beth Klingensmith already knows the case well -- her great-great-great grandmother was the victim of matricide by Henry Moore, which makes Beth a cousin of the alleged serial killer who may have been responsible for the eight murders in Villisca. After years of study, Beth believes that the Villisca murders may be connected to five similar cases across the Midwest. She has written a 33-page academic paper for a master's level class at Emporia State in Kansas that looks at connections between the cases and is an excellent exploration of the theory. Beth is versed in criminology and the depth of research is obvious. She has mapped the crimes and charted the similarities between the murders in Villisca, Iowa and Colorado Springs, Colorado; Monmouth, Illinois; Ellsworth, Kansas; Paola, Kansas; and Columbia, Missouri as well as four similar crimes from the era.

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Of all the reviews... I thought it interesting that famous film critic Roger Ebert has announced a "best of" book, and of all the reviews he could have pulled from his drawer as examples of his best, it is the fictional telling of the story of serial killer Aileen Wournos that he points to as an example of one of his best reviews ever:

We are told to hate the sin but not the sinner, and as I watched "Monster" I began to see it as an exercise in the theological virtue of charity. It refuses to objectify Wuornos and her crimes and refuses to exploit her story in the cynical manner of true crime sensationalism -- insisting instead on seeing her as one of God's creatures worthy of our attention.

Which is an interesting remark to make... as long as he never intends to run for public office.

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The Interpretation of Murder Now here's a new fictional historic crime title that's right up our dark alleys. The Interpretation of Murder is a thriller written by Jed Rubenfeld, professor of law at Yale. It's set in 1909 during Sigmund Freud's visit to New York City and is billed as "a spellbinding thriller featuring Sigmund Freud and the search for a diabolical killer in turn of the century New York." From the website for the book:

In 1909, Sigmund Freud arrived in New York for what would be his only U.S. visit. Upon his return to Vienna, he rarely spoke of the trip, but referred to Americans as "savages" for the rest of his life. What befell the great genius during his journey to these shores?

And another that has people citing Caleb Carr....

The Beautiful Cigar Girl The Mary Rogers mystery has made it into fiction again. This one is by well-known mystery author Daniel Stashower. From the recent New York Times book review:

Murder in the city casts a peculiar spell, a mixture of horror, fascination and relief. One more member of the herd has been picked off, but it was somebody else who attracted the invisible, anonymous hand that could strike anyone at any time. When the victim is a beautiful woman, sex enters the equation, and you have front-page news.

That was certainly the case in the summer of 1841, when Mary Rogers, a young saleswoman at John Anderson's Tobacco Emporium on Lower Broadway in Manhattan, disappeared and turned up a few days later floating in the Hudson River. Her baffling murder, a sensation at the time, attracted the attention not only of the city's fire-breathing newspaper editors, but also of Edgar Allan Poe, who assigned his fictional detective, C. Auguste Dupin, to solve the crime.

Their converging stories are the twin strands that Daniel Stashower neatly ties together in "The Beautiful Cigar Girl," his atmospheric, suspenseful re-creation of a crime, a city and a writer as doomed as the victim he wrote about...

Mr. Stashower, deftly interweaving contemporary press accounts of the murder and the investigation into his narrative, vividly recreates the atmosphere of the period in a moody, sepia-toned style that recalls "The Alienist" by Caleb Carr and "The Devil in the White City" by Erik Larson. Cutting back and forth between the Rogers investigation and Poe's life, he gradually brings his two subjects to the point of convergence, creating a compelling portrait of Poe along the way.

Anyone who can blend Caleb Carr and Erik Larson has earned a spot on my wish list while I wait for someone to publish a Carr-esque title that is not set in New York.

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Murder in Room 103 More than one person has brought to my attention the terrific article appearing on CourtTV.com by Harriet Ryan -- it's an article called Murder in Room 103 about a case in Seoul, South Korea. "A beautiful exchange student is murdered. Another American confesses. Why is the crime unsolved?" (The rendering requires broadband connection and Media Player to fully appreciate.) "This is a good, thorough job of reporting a bizarre crime and even more bizarre investigation," says one of my correspondents. "Normally, I'm not much on Court TV stuff, but this story is exceptional."

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If you can't get enough Clews well, Todd Matthews was kind enough to ask me some questions about blogging and true crime in general for a text version of his Missing Pieces radio program, and the Q&A is linked here. I really do need to update that stale old picture. I'm much better looking these days. Though it doesn't stop me from saying things that maybe I wouldn't on reflection. Like that. Okay, I'm done for the day....

Villisca: The Best Movie Ever Made in the Genre

Legendary true crime writer Edmund Pearson once said, "The Borden case is without parallel in the criminal history of America. It is the most interesting, and perhaps the most puzzling murder that has occurred in this country." Axe_1

For two decades I agreed with him.

But yesterday I watched a two-hour documentary on an unsolved murder case from Iowa. Now my head has been entirely spun around, and I look not to the east but to the west and a tiny town called Villisca, Iowa -- and I stand corrected. Pearson, you were wrong all along. The greatest unsolved murder in the history of America took place in 1912, and the film Villisca: Living With a Mystery is an excellent introduction to a case that will leave all students of true crime saying, "Lizzie who?"

If Lizzie Borden is Historic True Crime 101, then the obscene axe murders that took the lives of eight people (including six children) as they slept, destroying the psyche of this quiet Iowa town on June 10, 1912, is Historic True Crime 401: it will call on all you think you've learned about criminology.

Villisca: Living With a Mystery is the single best true crime documentary I have ever seen (and I do believe I've seen virtually all of them). With exquisite care, never dipping into the sensationalism that would have been within easy reach (and which the residents of Villisca would not have tolerated), the filmmakers relay the facts of the murders, the effect they had on the townsfolk, the suspects, the theories, the courtroom dramas. It even includes a (tastefully done) computer animation of the crime scene and interviews with a forensic psychiatrist as well as FBI profiler Robert K. Ressler, a very nice touch for those of us who like to hear from profilers on everything. The movie also features top-notch production values and narration, interviews with writers, historians, and residents, and hundreds of historic photos of the people and places involved (which are not repeated, and I'm glad of this. Endless repetition of the same photos over and over and over is one of my primary beefs with most true crime stories depicted on film and TV.)

The murders of a prominent businessman, his wife, their four children, and two young girls who were visiting that night just terrified the town. They couldn't explain a crime like this -- eight people, killed in their beds with an axe; one of the victims was posed afterward -- how could an early twentieth century mind wrap itself around it? There were no witnesses, no fingerprints, no apparent motive, and it was never solved. Descriptions of the murder scene strongly reminded me of Thomas Harris's novel Red Dragon, for those who know that reference (Amazon link).

For decades, residents of Villisca argued about who committed the murders, when they would talk about it at all. Was it the state senator, who certainly had ample cause to hate? Was it the preacher, the profoundly mentally ill Englishman known as a peeping Tom and pervert, who confessed to the slayings? Or was it a serial killer who was implicated in a string of similar butcheries and who kept newspaper clippings on the crime? While the film does not purport to have the final answer, it certainly is a satisfactory exploration of the horrific event.

The film has received universally good reviews, with all Amazon reviews giving it the full five stars and glowing viewer comments on IMDb such as --

  • "A wonderful film... faithful and respectful... I highly recommend it."
  • "An enjoyable movie for crime buffs and historians -- very well presented."
  • "Great. I wasn't expecting to get so caught up... keeps you glued to the story... an excellent murder mystery and a good historical documentary worth seeing."
  • "I... was captivated...this story will knock your socks off."
  • "Two hours well spent."
  • "Absolutely engaging! ... Like Ken Burns... the attention to detail, accuracy, use of animation to take the viewer into the home and town all make this film credible and engaging."
  • "What a wonderful piece of work!"

The comparison to legendary documentary filmmaker Ken Burns is certainly appropriate, for this film is in his league. The film is so absorbing that I completely forgot at several points that I meant to take notes and had to watch it again. Though I would have watched it again anyway and will watch it again in the future and am glad to have my own copy.

If you have seen this film, and/or have studied this murder case, I would love to hear your opinions. I find myself utterly absorbed in this mystery to the point that I added a "Villisca" category to Clews (at left) and want to explore it further. The movie's official website features quite a lot of content, as does the "official site" of the murders. A genealogy buff has created a website featuring some of the original newspaper coverage. The Villisca Historical Society also has a website that delves into the mystery in detail.

The movie is being released on DVD this month, and you can order a copy from the official website for the film or from Amazon. It will also be available for rent from the Family Video chain as well as Netflix

Grade: A+. The best movie ever made in the true crime genre.

"Why, now, here's something like a murder! This is the real thing. This is genuine. This is what you can approve, can recommend to a friend."

--Thomas DeQuincey

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