Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - H.H. Holmes: America's First Serial Killer
Episode Date: October 30, 2023In 1893, the eyes of the world turned to the city of Chicago, which was hosting the World’s Fair. The fair was the largest public demonstration at that point of the new technology called electricity.... However, there was a dark side to what was happening in Chicago. One man created a building that has been dubbed a murder castle. Many of the people who entered his macabre structure never left alive. Learn more about HH Holmes, the man who is considered to be America’s first serial killer, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month. Newspapers.com Newspapers.com is like a time machine. Dive into their extensive online archives to explore history as it happened. With over 800 million digitized newspaper pages spanning three centuries, Newspapers.com provides an unparalleled gateway to the past, with papers from the US, UK, Canada, Australia and beyond. Use the code “EverythingEverywhere” at checkout to get 20% off a publisher extra subscription at newspapers.com. ButcherBox ButcherBox is the perfect solution for anyone looking to eat high-quality, sustainably sourced meat without the hassle of going to the grocery store. With ButcherBox, you can enjoy a variety of grass-fed beef, heritage pork, free-range chicken, and wild-caught seafood delivered straight to your door every month. ButcherBox.com/Daily Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In 1893, the eyes of the world turned to the city of Chicago, which was hosting the
world's fair.
The fair was the largest public demonstration at that point of the new technology called electricity.
However, there was a dark side to what was happening in Chicago.
One man created a building that's been dubbed a murder castle, and many of the people who
entered his macabre structure never left alive.
Learn more about H.H. Holmes, the man who's considered to be America's first serial killer
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The man known to history as Dr. Henry Howard Holmes was born Herman Webster Mugget on May 16th, 1816.
in the town of Gilminton, New Hampshire.
He was, by all accounts, a very intelligent child,
who grew up in a highly troubled household.
Both of his parents were very religious and strict Methodists.
However, his father was also an alcoholic and very abusive.
Herman, however, was extremely bright and was able to attend the Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire.
However, there, he was also bullied by his classmates,
who often picked on him because of his intelligence.
Later in life, he recounted one episode where there was a skeleton,
in one of the classrooms that he was terrified of.
The boys in his class made him stand in front of the skeleton with the hands of the skeleton on his face.
Initially terrified, he eventually said to have found it calming and later claimed that the incident
began his fascination with death.
Around this time, he also supposedly began dissecting animals, which psychologists now recognize
as an early symptom of being a psychopath.
He graduated high school with honors at the age of 16.
At the age of 17, he married Eclara L.
Lovering, with whom he had one child, and attended the University of Vermont, which he dropped out
at at the age of 18. He worked for several years in New Hampshire as an apprentice to Dr. Nahum White,
who was an advocate of human dissection. At the age of 21, he entered the University of Michigan
Medical School and got a job at the anatomy lab. It was here where he began his career of engaging
in extremely creepy and or shady things. His supervisor at the anatomy department was Professor
William James Hurdman, and there were accusations that Herdman and Mudgeett were robbing graves to
supply the department with cadavers. He paid for his education through petty scams, usually involving
defrauding life insurance companies with the cadavers that he stole. While at the University of Michigan,
he began becoming violent with his wife. She eventually left Michigan and returned to New Hampshire
with their son, and she had little connection with him for the rest of his life. However, at no point
did they ever get legally divorced. More on that.
in a bit. After he graduated for Michigan with his medical degree, he moved to the town of Moros,
New York. He was seen in the company of a boy who soon disappeared. Rumors spread that
Mudgeett may have been involved in the boy's disappearance. He claimed that the boy had gone
back to his home in Massachusetts and then left town immediately under a cloud of suspicion. No formal
investigation into the event ever took place. He then moved to Philadelphia, where he worked
odd jobs and engaged in more scams. One of his jobs included.
working in a pharmacy where a young boy died after taking a prescription purchased at the store.
In 1886, he again left the city under a cloud of suspicion and moved to Chicago.
It was at this time he began going by the name Henry Howard Holmes, so he could evade
detection from his previous scams. The name was taken as a nod to the fictional character,
Sherlock Holmes. After arriving in Chicago, he met and married 24-year-old Merta Bellknap.
As he was still legally married to his previous wife, Clara, he was now,
guilty of bigamy, which, as it would turn out, would be the least problematic of all the crimes
that he would be guilty of. He got a job working at the drugstore at the corner of South Wallace
Avenue and West 63rd Street in the Inglewood neighborhood of South Chicago, not far from Jackson
Park. By all accounts, he was actually a model employee. He worked hard, saved his money, and eventually
purchased the pharmacy. It was then in 1887, he purchased a vacant lot across the street and had a two
story building constructed. The first story would be the location of his new pharmacy, and above
that would be apartments. He, of course, didn't bother to pay several of his contractors and was taken to
court. He opened a jewelry counter in his pharmacy and hired a man by the name of Ned Connor,
a professional jeweler and watchmaker to run it. Connor came with his wife, Julia Smith, and their
daughter, Pearl. Holmes began an affair with Julia that was discovered by Ned, which resulted
in Ned leaving his wife and child. Both Julia and
and Pearl later disappeared on Christmas Eve, 1891. That same year, Emily Van Tassel,
who also worked at the drugstore, also disappeared. In 1892, Holmes built a third story
onto his building. This third story was very strange, even to the workers who constructed it. More
on that in a bit. Holmes claimed that the new level of the building was to serve as a hotel for
visitors to the upcoming World's Columbia Exposition, which was the World's Fair celebrating
the 400th anniversary of Columbus's discovering the new world. In 1992, very fishy things began to
happen. Emmeline Sigran began working for Holmes in May as a secretary and allegedly
began an affair with him. She disappeared in December. A stenographer Holmes hired by the name
of Kitty Kelly also disappeared in 1992. In 1893, an actress named Minnie Williams moved to Chicago
and met homes. He managed to defraud her of property she owned in Texas. Her sister, Nanny Williams,
came to visit in July, and both of them were never seen again. During this time, he was continually
conducting scams. He tried to burn down his building to collect insurance money, but the insurance
company found it to be arson, so they never paid out. In January 1894, he met and married
Georgina Yoke in Denver, Colorado, while still legally married to his other two wives. That same year,
he met up with a former criminal by the name of Benjamin Pitasel, whom he used as an accomplice in many of his scams.
He ran several schemes of Pittazel, and in 1894, the two decided to defraud a life insurance company by faking Pidazel's death.
However, Holmes needed a body to produce for the insurance company.
He realized that the best body would be that of Pidazel himself.
On September 4th, 1894, he knocked out Pidazel with chloroform and lit him on fire while he was still alive.
He then convinced Pitazel's wife that Benjamin was still alive and in London.
Holmes convinced her to sign over custody of their three children to himself
and then took the children, Piticel's wife, and his third wife, on a trip to the eastern United States.
Holmes said he was going to take Piticel's wife to meet her husband.
In reality, investigators were on his trail for some schemes that he perpetrated in Texas.
Eventually, he abandoned Pitazel's wife and continued with their three children.
All three children eventually disappeared.
Holmes' luck eventually ran out when he was apprehended in Boston visiting his parents on November 17, 1894.
Pinkerton agents hired by an insurance company that he had defrauded were surveilling the home.
Despite all of the missing people whom Holmes was associated with,
the only one that he was initially accused of killing was Benjamin Pitezel and his children.
However, they had no evidence.
A Philadelphia police officer named Frank Geyer was put on the case.
He retraced Holmes steps, and in July of 1895, the bodies of the two Piticel girls were found buried in the cellar of a house in Toronto.
The jawbone of the young Pitazel boy was later found in a house where Holmes had stayed in Indianapolis.
An analysis of Benjamin Pitazel's body, and the appearance of Rigger Mortis didn't fit Holmes's alibi, and after that, the gig was up.
Once news of the discovery of the bodies found in Toronto hit the press, the Chicago authorities and media began to focus on the building.
building he owned, and in particular, the odd third floor. This was the height of yellow journalism,
and reporting on Holmes became a sensation. The building was dubbed a murder castle. There were
reports of asphyxiation rooms in the building, rooms that had asbestos walls and flame throwers.
They claimed that there was a shoot that went from the third floor to the basement, where there
was an exam table and an incinerator to burn bodies. Newspapers began reporting that H.H. Holmes had murdered as many,
as 200 people.
Here, I have to take a break from the story.
Over a year ago, I had planned to do an episode on H.H. Holmes, and in one of the only times
ever, I abandoned the episode in the middle of researching it.
Because the first time I heard the story, I heard what had been passed down from the
original 1890s news reports. That's the most common version of the H.H. Holmes tale,
the story of the murder castle and the torture rooms.
Getting to the truth of the matter is difficult because almost every source I have read has a different take on the story.
As far as I can tell, most of the stories about the murder castle were fabricated.
The third floor of his building was oddly designed, and there were hidden rooms, but they were actually mostly used to hide furniture that homes owed money to creditors on.
There were some objects found in the building that were tied to some of the victims, but nothing on the scale that the newspapers claimed.
In October 1895, H.H. Holmes was found guilty of the murder of Benjamin Pitezell and sentenced to death.
After his sentence, he confessed to the murders of 27 people in exchange for a payment of $7,500
from William Randolph Hearst's newspapers.
But there was a problem with his story.
Several of the murders he confessed to, he undoubtedly committed.
However, several of the people he claimed to have killed were later found to be alive.
Most of the murders he claimed were not done with some elaborate torture room, but via asphyxiation with chloroform.
On August 19, 1895, two men were seen entering the so-called murder castle, and minutes later, there were several explosions, and the upper floor was on fire.
The fire was put out and the building survived, remaining in active use until 1938.
On May 7, 1896, Herman Webster Mudget, aka Dr. Henry Howard Holmes, was executed by Hank.
in Philadelphia. He did not die instantly. Rather, it took him 15 minutes to be strangled to death.
His last request was for his coffin to be covered in concrete and buried extra deep so grave robbers
wouldn't take his corpse, because that is exactly what he would have done.
After his death, rumors persisted that Holmes had somehow managed to escape the executioner.
In 2017, his body was exhumed, and it was verified to have been him via dental records.
There is an enormous amount of misinformation about the case of H.H. Holmes due to the sensational
coverage of him at the time. There are nine murders that can be definitively tied to Holmes.
And it is entirely possible, if not probable, that many of the disappearances in Chicago around
the time of the World's Fair were due to Holmes as well. The actual number of murders
committed by H.H. Holmes will probably never be known. However, the actual number doesn't matter,
as H. H. Holmes was certainly one of the most vile criminals of the 19th century.
As he told the police during his confession, quote,
I was born with the devil in me.
I could not help the fact that I was a murderer,
no more than the poet can help the inspiration to sing.
I was born with the evil one standing as my sponsor beside the bed
where I was ushered into the world,
and he has been with me ever since.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiefer.
Today's review comes from listener Chaz Cosgrave over on CastBox.
He writes, The Perfect Podcast.
I left five-star reviews on Apple, Spotify, and Amazon just to show how much my kids and I enjoy our daily dose of learning from you.
Our first review comes today when we finally listen to every episode.
Greeting from Zanesville, Ohio.
Oh, and my daughter has a request.
She would love to hear you say the words, I actually love candy corn.
Thank you, Gary.
Well, thanks, Chaz.
First, let me congratulate you and your...
kids on joining the Completionist Club. Second, and this is a good lesson for your daughter,
just because I read the words in a review doesn't make them true. Remember, if you leave a review
or send me a boostagram, you two can have it read on the show.
