Murder In America - EP. 22 IOWA - The Villisca Axe Murders, & The Most Haunted House In America
Episode Date: July 3, 20218 victims. One bloody axe. And one haunted house. In 1912, 8 people lost their life in one night when a phantom killer entered the Moore household in Villisca, Iowa, and slaughtered everybody inside. ...This killer left some strange evidence at the scene, and the creepiest part of all? They were NEVER caught. This, is the FULL STORY, of the Villisca axe murders. And you're listening, to MURDER IN AMERICA. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Warning, the following podcast is not suitable for all audiences.
We go into great detail with every case that we cover
and do our best to bring viewers even deeper into the stories
by utilizing disturbing audio and sound effects.
Trigger warnings from the stories we cover
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Imagine you're in bed.
Your friends and their entire family
are fast asleep in the rooms directly above you.
You've had a long day and you're ready to call it a night and go to sleep.
When all of a sudden you hear a creek coming from above.
It's the movement of the floorboards, echoing down from the attic.
And you tell yourself that it's nothing.
Everyone's asleep, aren't they?
But deep down, you know that there's somebody up there, moving around, gliding through the darkness.
Then suddenly you hear footsteps coming down the stairs.
Then darkness.
It's impossible for you, the listener, to truly put yourself into the situation that we just described,
because if you really were to, you would have to die.
We were just describing the point of view of Lena Stillinger,
most likely the only victim of the Velisca Axe murders who awoke before they were murdered.
Eight victims, six of which were children.
one house forever stained and one bloody axe.
This is the story of the Velisca Axe murders,
and you're listening to Murder in America.
Veska, Iowa, just over 3 million people live in Iowa.
But in 2010, the population of Velasca was listed at only 1,252 residents.
And I'm sure that all 1,252 of those who live in the town know of the unsolved.
mass murder that occurred there back in 1912.
When driving through Velisca, one would never expect that this small village was once touched
by such deep darkness.
But when you arrive at that house at 508 East 2nd Street, now dubbed the Velisca Axe Murder
House, that darkness, which still hovers over the community, seems to reach out and touch you.
Let's go back in time.
7 a.m., June 10th, 1912, a local resident who lived in Velisca named Mary Peckham has been hanging
her wash to dry for the last hour or so. Birds are chirping and the people in the town are
just beginning to wake up and start their week. However, as she sits outside of her home
finishing her laundry, Mary notices that the Moor family, her neighbors, who are usually up
and at them doing their chores, are not awake. So Mary concerned makes the short walk over to the
Moore residents and knocks on their door. But after knocking for a while, Mary is met with silence.
She is now growing concerned as the Moore family is large and she attempts to open the front door
to the home, but it is locked. Mary then lets the family's chickens out from their coop,
heads home and calls Ross Moore, the brother of Josiah, the patriarch of the Moore family,
whose house she couldn't get inside of. Ross then quickly heads over to the house,
once again knocks on the door and yells for the family, but receives no responsibility.
response. But for Ross, this is no issue, for he is able to quickly locate a spare key to his
brother's home, so he grabs the key, unlocks the door, and heads inside. While Mary waits
patiently outside on the porch, Ross enters the more residence and notices that the house is
very, very dark and overwhelmingly silent. As he explores the first floor of the home, he notices
that the family appears to be gone, and that, oddly enough, all of the mirrors in the house
are covered with blankets. The shades have all been drawn as well and all windows covered with
fabric, so the darkness is penetrating. As he steps through the parlor area, searching for signs of
his brother and his family, questions and concerns are running wild through his head. Where are they?
Did they just up and leave town? Are they all right? But when Ross enters the guest bedroom,
located right off of the parlor area, he stops in his tracks. This was when Ross realized that the
the family had left for a vacation. In fact, as he was then probably assuming, the family was
all still home in bed. But they weren't asleep. They were dead. Ross runs out to the porch
and immediately tells Mary Peckham to run home and call Hank Court, Belisca's town marshal and most
powerful law officer. While Ross was downstairs in the home, he had discovered the dead
bodies of two young girls lying in bed next to one another, not wanting to disqual to
disturb the crime scene, he quickly exited the home and was now waiting for the law to show up.
Hank quickly arrives at the more residents and is granted access to the home by Ross.
Hank was not prepared for what he was about to see. As one half of Velisca's police force at the time,
Hank, around 50 years old in 1912, was used to keeping order, not solving homicides. He spent most of his
time in town rattling on door handles to make sure that business owners in town hadn't forgotten
to lock their doors at the end of the night. He shooed away hobos and vagrants out of town and
made appearances at local events. Montgomery County, the county in which Velisca sat, was a dry
county at the time, so he never really even had to deal with drunks or disorderly individuals,
as it was near impossible to get alcohol to Veliska. But as Hank entered the Morehouse that day,
he was about to become the first witness of the worst crime scene in the history of the state of
Iowa. Now, just to be as factually accurate as possible, I want to include here that various
sources describe the discovery of the bodies differently. Since this crime happened so long ago,
and there are a lot of different sources that we use to write every podcast, we have to include
that disclaimer. For example, a Smithsonian article states that Hank Horton brought two doctors
and a minister with him for the initial search of the house. However, on the official website
of the Velisca Axe murders, it states that Hank discovered these bodies alone, then called for
assistance. It's hard to tell the specifics of exactly how this discovery went down, but according to
most sources, this is what happened when Hank entered the residence. So Hank heads inside of the house.
Once again, it's dark and completely silent. He walks around the first floor of the home,
through the kitchen and parlor, and comes across the dead bodies of the two young girls,
exactly where Ross had told him that he would find them. They were lying next to each other in bed,
bloody and beaten. Hank then walks over to the wooden staircase. And I can't imagine what this was like
for him. Not only did he not know who was in the house and who was dead or alive, but at this point,
the killer could have still been lurking upstairs in the darkness, possibly waiting for someone
to walk up so that they could claim another life. Hank gathers himself and he walks up the creaky
stairs step by step to the second floor. And what he sees upstairs is a sight that Hank
Horton would never forget. At the top of the stairs was the master bedroom and there in the bed
lay the bodies of Josiah Moore, the father of the family, and Sarah Moore, the mother. Both had
suffered extremely gruesome injuries to their heads. Allegedly, a later examination of the corpses
revealed the fact that Josiah's face had been beaten so badly that both of his eyes were missing.
As he stumbles through the upstairs of the home and walks past the attic entrance and into the
children's room, Hank makes another horrific discovery. There were the four more children,
Herman, Mary, Arthur, and Paul, all still laying in their beds, all dead. This was a gruesome
crime scene. The children's and parents' beds were soaked with blood. The children's and parents' beds were soaked with
blood. The victims that day included parents Josiah Moore aged 43 years and Sarah Moore aged 39 years.
Their four children, Herman Montgomery, aged 11, Mary Catherine, aged 10, Arthur Boyd, aged 7,
and Paul Vernon aged 5. The two girls downstairs were later identified as local girls from
another local family who were friends with the Moore children, who had been at the house
that night for a sleepover. Enos Stillinger, aged 8, and Lena Stillinger, aged Lina Stillinger, aged
11. The faces on almost all of the bodies had been beaten so savagely that they were virtually
unrecognizable. Immediately, Hank exited the house and allegedly said to Ross Moore,
My God, Ross, there is someone murdered in every bed. This was only the beginning of what would
grow to become an extremely chaotic day in the history of Velisca. Three different doctors were
summoned to the Velisca house that day. Men by the names of J. Clark Cooper, Edgar Huff,
and S.F. Williams. Another man named Wesley Ewing, who was the Moore family's minister,
also headed to the home. Hank had allegedly left to go get Dr. Cooper, but by the time that they
arrived back at the crime scene, a crowd was growing outside of the home. Word had quickly spread
throughout Veliska, and the locals had their morbid fascination captured. Quickly, Hank and the
doctors entered the home and began investigating the crime scene. According to them, this is how the scene,
Each member of the family had been murdered in their beds. It seemed like none of the victims had
awoken before they were killed, save for Lena Stillinger, who appeared to have a defensive wound on her
arm and was lying lengthwise across the bed, as if she had kicked her legs and fought back after
being struck once by the axe before she received the ultimate death blow. Lena's nightgown had
also been pushed up to her waist, revealing that she had no undergarments on. She had also been
left in a somewhat obscene position, with her bare buttocks protruding from the sheets. This
initially led some to question if she had been sexually assaulted, and although the possibility
hasn't been definitively ruled out, the general consensus is that she was not molested.
The blood of the victims had soaked into the pillows and mattresses underneath them, but strangely,
there was barely any blood on the floors. Brain matter at the time, which was strewn about
the victim's heads, had remained gelatinous, and yet the blood on the bed sheets and pillows had hardened,
which led Dr. Williams, the first doctor to actually examine the bodies, to conclude that the
victims had been killed between the hours of midnight and 5 a.m. that morning. There was a plaster
chipped from the walls above the bed of Josiah and Sarah, plaster that had crumbled when the killer
swung the axe up over their heads with tremendous force. This left plaster dust covering the bed.
Allegedly, Josiah was the only victim who had actually been struck and killed with the blade of the axe.
Every other victim had been beaten to death with the blunt end.
Now, all of that is gruesome enough, but one of the reasons why the Velisca axe murders have remained
seared into the minds of true crime fanatics is the strange details surrounding the murders.
For one, the killer, after murdering their victims, went back and covered the face of every corpse with a piece of clothing or other cloth material.
and then covered the entire body with the bed sheet that they had been sleeping under at the time of their death.
It's almost as if they couldn't bear to witness the fruits of their bloody labor.
Or maybe they felt some sort of remorse after the killings
and had some sort of twisted respect for the dead that they wanted to show.
Either way, the faces of the victims were so battered that they were unrecognizable.
After killing each member of the Moore family,
the killer had apparently returned to the bodies of Sarah and Josiah
and dealt their faces even more blows in some sort of expression.
of maniacal rage.
Like we said before, Josiah's head had been beaten in so badly that his eyes had simply disappeared.
Either the killer had wanted to make sure that the adults were fully deceased,
or they harbored some sort of deep rage against them that came out in the gruesome act
of corpse desecration.
The reason why officials believed that the killer returned to Josiah and Sarah's bodies
to defile them further was the fact that at one point one of Sarah's
shoes, which was lying on the floor directly next to the bed, had filled with blood. And at one point,
the killer had knocked it over and spilled this blood across the floorboards. There were also wounds
from the blade of the axe across Sarah's face, but they weren't bloody like the others. This
led investigators to believe that these additional wounds had been inflicted after Sarah's blood
had stopped circulating. The killer was obviously disturbed, but it was their behavior during and after the
killings that was truly bizarre. At some point, the killer had gone through and covered every mirror
and reflective surface in the house with cloth and fabric. But why? Could it be that the killer didn't
want to see their own reflection as they committed these atrocious acts? Were they honoring the
Victorian funeral custom that mirrors must be covered while a body is laying in a house? Or could
could be that they didn't want to see the ghosts of their victims in these reflections, as many
people during the Victorian era believed that spirits could be trapped in mirrors. That is a question
to which we will never have a definitive answer. Multiple oil lamps were also found in the home,
which led investigators to believe that the murderer used these lamps to light their murder spree.
They had walked from room to room with these dim lights, murdering everyone while enjoying
every moment of their bloodbath. Now obviously the timetables of these murders are a little
up in the air, but it is believed that the perpetrator first killed all of the more family upstairs
and then moved down to the first floor to kill the Stillinger girls. The axe was found propped
up against the wall in the guest room where the girls were, and it appeared as though the
killer had tried to clean it, but they didn't do a great job because the blood and hairs of the
victims were still on it. And interestingly enough, it wasn't the killer's axe.
The axe actually belonged to Josiah Moore.
The killer had come to their house, empty-handed,
and used the family's own axe to murder them.
And there it was against the wall of the guest room downstairs.
And it was here in this room that one of the most bizarre pieces of evidence was found.
On the floor in this room sat a four-pound slab of bacon.
And this bacon had been wrapped in some sort of a cheesecloth or linen.
To this very day, nobody has been able to provide a solid answer as to why this bacon was brought
by the killer from the icebox in the house into this room.
I've heard theories that the killer used this bacon and cloth to pleasure themselves after the killings,
but once again, there has never been a solid explanation given for this odd piece of evidence,
so we're just going to leave it here as a mystery.
In the kitchen area, investigators discover a wash basin filled with bloody water and a half-eaten meal.
It appeared as though the killer had committed the murders and actually hung out in the house for a while before leaving the scene.
That's one eerie detail that stuck with us.
The thought that the person murdered everyone in the house, then proceeded to cover the mirrors, positioned the bacon in the guest room,
and even took the time to clean themselves up and enjoy a meal.
All while throughout the house there are eight corpses, covered in blood while the house was lit by a dim light.
of the lamp, which is absolutely eerie. So that's what the doctors and those first on the scene
at the house that morning discovered. But quickly, all of this evidence would be tampered with,
and some key evidence destroyed. Back then in 1912, crime scene tape wasn't a thing yet. And remember
how we told you about the group of locals that had begun gathering outside of the Moor House
as word of the murders spread throughout town that morning? Well, curious members of the community
had actually already begun to enter the house and were gawking and trampling through the
throughout the crime scene. Yes, while the doctors and other officials were inspecting the
bodies and gathering evidence from the home, locals were walking throughout the house,
taking in the sight of the corpses, and removing morbid souvenirs of their own. At one point,
Dr. F.S. Williams emerged from the house, distraught, and urged the growing crowd. Don't go in there.
You'll regret it until the last day of your life. But alas, the townspeople could not be stopped.
The crime scene had quickly become a huge spectacle for locals in Veliska.
It was said by noon that day and estimated up to 100 residents had entered the house and contaminated the scene.
These frenzied locals were walking through, leaving footprints, fingerprints,
moving the family's possessions around,
and shifting the way that Hank and Ross had found the home earlier that day.
One local man by the name of Bert McCall had even,
removed fragments from Josiah's skull, which he would go on to keep in a box at his business for the years after the crime.
By noon that day, the National Guard finally arrived and removed the crowd, but not before these locals had irreversibly damaged the crime scene.
We all know how important it is to conserve the scene.
It's one of the main rules, and these locals didn't care.
They just wanted to see what had happened in their small town.
And nobody had any idea who could have murdered the Moor family and the Stillingard girls.
The Moors had no widely known enemies, and this act of violence seemed to be completely random.
This confusion lasted well into the night.
Locals had already begun to form together, roaming through Veliska in search of anybody that they didn't recognize.
They were going door to door, asking questions of their own, attempting to locate the perpetrator so that they could carry out
some vigilante justice of their own. And all the while, throughout the entire day, the bodies
laid inside of the more residents. Why? Well, the county attorney, a man by the name of William Ratcliffe,
was actually out of town that day in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, about 200 miles away. Local officials
were afraid to release the bodies to local morticians, because Ratcliffe and a few bloodhounds that
were called in hadn't yet arrived at the scene. So there, the deceased family and the two
still-in-jur girls sat in the house in a state of dead limbo.
Eventually, later that night at about 8.30 p.m. after a long afternoon of waiting, the bloodhound
dogs arrived. They were called in to attempt to catch the scent of the perpetrator, but after an
uneventful scent detection session, the dogs were not able to provide authorities with any leads.
Ratcliffe eventually showed up as well, but he was unable to release the bodies of the victims
to morticians until about midnight that night. That evening, in Velisca, a crowd formed. They held
torches, guns, and weapons in a scene straight out of Frankenstein and wanted ever so badly to
identify who had committed this atrocious crime. But even though the crowd was intimidating,
they did no good. No perpetrator was caught. No suspect was identified. And it was on that day
in 1912 when the small town of Veliska, Iowa lost its innocence. So let's briefly discuss the victims.
We couldn't find a lot of information on the moors. But what we could guess,
we can tell that Josiah Moore was born in 1868 and his wife Sarah whom he died with was born in 1873.
The two married in Sarah's parents house on December 6, 1899, and they had four children together.
Herman, Catherine, Arthur, who they called Boyd and Paul.
Josiah Moore owned a successful hardware store in Velisca and was considered one of the more powerful
people in the community at the time of his murder. Sarah was a children's director at the local
Presbyterian Church. But the question still remained for the townspeople in the time after the murders.
How did they happen? Did someone enter the house silently in the dead of night and eliminate the
entire family before slipping back out into the darkness? In the wake of the murders, it was
widely reported that there were cigarette butts found in the upstairs attic of the home, which
opened directly into the hallway connecting the master bedroom and the children's room. Some
have speculated that this phantom killer hid in the attic quietly on the night of the murders,
waiting until the family fell asleep for the perfect moment to sneak out and commit the killings.
Well, I've read some articles that claim that the cigarette butts were never actually found
inside of the attic and that those details were falsely reported by the press at the time. Either way,
the killer had to get into the upstairs of the house at some point, so that's where we're going
to drop in for that portion of the reconstruction of events. But first, let's go back to the evening
of June 9, 1912, just mere hours before the Moor family was annihilated with an axe.
It was Children's Day at the Presbyterian Church where the Moors and Stillinger's attended.
It was a day of celebration and an exciting beginning to the summer for everyone in the community.
That day, Ina and Lena Stillinger left their family's farm early in the morning to head to church.
They had planned on attending the morning service, then heading to their grandmother's house for the rest of the day.
However, at some point, the girls were invited over to the Moore's house by Sarah Moore herself.
She placed a call to their house and spoke to Blanche, their older sister, and asked permission for the girls to spend the night at their family's home.
Blanche told Sarah that her parents were outside at the moment, but she would let them know that the girls would not be returning home that night.
The annual Children's Day program commenced at 8 p.m. that evening, and once again, was coordinated by Sarah Moore.
All of the Moore children, along with the Stillinger girls, participated in the program that night,
while Josiah Moore attended sitting in the audience.
The program concluded at about 9.30 p.m.
And after some small talk after the production, the Moore family, along with the Stillinger girls,
walked home to the Moor House and arrived at roughly 10 p.m.
The family then chatted for a bit, said their good nights, and headed to bed for a good night's rest after a long day.
Now, once again, we don't exactly know how or when the axe murderer entered the more residents,
but let's jump to the time of the murders.
Sometime between midnight and 5 a.m., the murderer either enters the home or emerges from the attic
where they had been hiding.
Slowly and methodically, they then begin their killing spree.
First, the killer approaches the bed where Josiah and Sarah are fast asleep.
Silently, they raise the axe.
and bury it into Josiah's head.
Incredibly, Sarah doesn't seem to awaken while her husband is slaughtered.
The killer then approaches Sarah's side of the bed,
raises the axe, and dispatches her in the same way.
The murderer then, still holding Josiah's axe,
enters the children's bedroom and murders the siblings one by one,
while the others remain fast asleep.
It's hard to believe that none of the kids were awakened by the sounds of their siblings
being killed in the same room.
But according to all reports, they all remained asleep while the killings were carried out.
The murderer then walked down the stairway and entered the room where Ina and Lena
Stillinger were sleeping, where they killed the two of them with the same acts that had been
used to murder the entire Moore family on the floor above.
After killing the Stilinger girls, the murderer then returned to the upstairs of the house
to deliver more blows to the faces of Josiah and Sarah, and possibly the children, too.
After the blood bath was over, the killer prepared themselves a meal, cleaned off the axe,
washed the blood from their hands and possibly their clothing, and enjoyed their late-night snack.
It was during this time frame when the perpetrator also most likely engaged in their business
with the raw bacon and covered the mirrors with cloth.
After all was said and done, the killer then extinguished the lamps that they were using to light
their way and quietly departed from the home, leaving eight dead.
bodies in their wake.
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So who would have wanted to kill the Moors? Well, as it turns out, there were a number of
colorful suspects attached to the Velisca axe murders at one point or another. We're going to
quickly try and cover them all. But we can't go into extreme detail into all of their backgrounds
and stories because the podcast would be hours long if we did that. So here are a few of our
First, let's take a look at the only man ever tried for the murders, a traveling preacher
by the name of Reverend Lynn George Jacqueline Kelly.
Kelly was an English immigrant who had arrived in Velisca just a few days before the murders
to take part in the children's services that the Moore family fateful attended and participated
in on the night of the murders.
Kelly, although a preacher, was a known sexual deviant and peeping Tom.
Two days before the killings, he was caught in Velisca peering through the windows of unsuspecting
local women. And in 1914, two years after the murders while living in South Dakota, Kelly took out
ads in newspapers, claiming that he was looking for a girl stenographer to do confidential work,
and that this stenographer must be willing to pose as a model. Apparently, a woman named
Jessamine Hodgson, who responded to the ad, claimed later on that after she wrote to Kelly,
she quickly received a letter back that was, according to a judge, so obscene, lewd, lascivious,
and filthy as to be offensive to this honorable court and improper to be spread upon the record
thereof. Apparently, amongst other things, Kelly had wanted her to type completely in the nude.
There were a lot of suspicious pieces of evidence that linked Kelly to the murders.
First and foremost was the fact that Kelly had attended the Children's Day services on the night
of the murders. People in the community were convinced that Kelly may have spotted the Moors
and the Stalinger girls that night and become immediately obsessed with them.
A depression found in the hay at the Moors Barn outside of their home,
and a peephole that could have been used by the killer to spy on them on the night of the murders,
led some to believe that Kelly had seen the family, followed them home,
and waited out in the barn until they had fallen asleep to enter the residence and end their lives.
In another suspicious twist, Kelly actually left Valiska early in the morning on June 10th,
5.19 a.m. train immediately after when investigators believed that the murders took place. On board
the train, Kelly allegedly told fellow passengers about the murders that had just taken place
in Veliska, three hours before they were discovered by Mary Peckham. He had also, shortly after the
murders, turned some bloody clothing into a laundry service in the nearby town of Macedonia. In addition,
a week after the murders happened, Kelly returned to Veliska, impersonated a foreign detective
visiting the investigation from the reputable Scotland Yard
and was granted an official tour of the Morehouse crime scene
with investigators present
before he was eventually found out to not be a foreign detective
and was in fact Reverend Kelly.
Kelly was eventually arrested and tried for the murders of Lena Stillinger.
And in an interesting twist, Kelly confessed to the murders,
stating, quote,
I killed the children upstairs first and the children downstairs last.
I knew God wanted me to do it this way.
Slay utterly came to my mind, and I picked up the axe, went into the house, and killed them.
End quote.
However, this coer's confession was thrown out before the trial, and the grand jury ended up hung 11 to 1 in favor of refusing to indict Kelly.
The second grand jury freed him, and he was never connected to the crimes again.
Kelly then left Feliska, moved around the country, and apparently ended up in New York and basically disappeared.
No one knows exactly where he ended up, what he ended up doing with his life, or where his final resting place is.
It still remains a mystery.
And I know any time we see a confession, we want to immediately place blame, but you have to understand that false confessions are a real thing.
and even back then when false confessions weren't super accepted, even a jury back then
did not believe that he actually committed these crimes.
There were also local migrants and drifters accused of the crimes.
A man by the name of Andy Sawyer was at one point believed to have been the axe-wielding killer.
According to a bridge foreman for the Bullington Railroad, on the morning that the bodies were found in the more residents,
Andy approached the railroad crew, clean-shaven, wearing a brown suit with muddy pants that were wet up to the knees.
He was given a job on the spot, but upon seeing the Velisca Axe murders in the local paper,
he immediately developed an obsession with the crime.
He constantly asked other workers if they had apprehended a suspect yet,
talked incessantly about the murders, and even confessed at one point that he had been in Veliska on the night of the crime.
and was forced to flee town so he wouldn't become a suspect.
The foreman of the crew turned Andy Sawyer into authorities in Velisca shortly after,
and according to the foreman, while he was waiting for the sheriff to arrive while he was turning Andy in,
Andy suddenly jumped into the air, screamed, and will cut your goddamn heads off,
and made a chopping motion with the axe that he held in his hand before slamming it down into the woodpile in front of him.
Andy also allegedly told the foreman's son at one point that he could show him exactly how the murderer slipped away from
Veliska, and proceeded to describe a creek and a tree, where he claimed that the murderer
had washed off in the river and escaped. The foreman's son did indeed find the tree in creek
where Andy had claimed he would find them, but it was proven that Andy was in a different
town on the night of the murders, and that his alibi really did check out, and he was released.
But shockingly, the main suspect in the crimes, aside from Reverend Kelly, of course,
was a man by the name of Frank Jones, a successful local businessman, a highly respected
member of the community and a powerful Iowa state senator. And Frank had personal connections to the Moore
family. First of all, years before he was killed, Josiah Moore had actually worked for Frank as a salesman
at his farm equipment business. Josiah had apparently been a star salesman and was making Frank a lot of
money. But reportedly, because he was fed up with working 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. shifts six days a week,
at one point Josiah left Frank's business, started his own and took the insanely profitable
John Deere farm equipment account with him.
In addition, it was rumored around town that Josiah had been having an affair with Frank's
daughter-in-law, a woman by the name of Donna. Donna was infamous in Veliska for apparently setting up
her extramarital affairs over the phone. During a time when phone calls had to be made through
the community's operator, it was impossible to keep those sorts of things quiet back then,
especially when these sexual rendezvous were made over the phone with another townsperson listening in.
Apparently, people in town knew that Frank and Josiah hated each other.
In public, in front of the entire community, the two would physically cross the street
in order to avoid crossing each other on the sidewalk.
But Frank, who was almost 60 years old at the time of the murders,
surely couldn't have been the one swinging the axe, right?
Well, enter into the picture a man named Willie Blackie,
Mansfield. In the years after the murders, many private detectives were brought in to provide their
expert opinions on who may have committed the killings, and at one point a man named James N. Wilkerson,
a detective, was assigned to the case. Detective Wilkerson was convinced that Frank Jones and his
son Albert had hired a man named Willie Blackie Mansfield to kill his business competitor, Josiah
Moore, and that during the murder, Blackie Mansfield had snapped and ended up murdering everyone
inside of the house. Detective Wilkerson alleged that Blacky Mansfield was a cocaine addict and a serial
killer, who two years after the Velisca murders, had slaughtered his very own wife, infant child,
father-in-law, and mother-in-law in Illinois in a similar manner. Detective Wilkerson was absolutely
convinced that Blacky Mansfield was the one who swung the axe in Veliska. In his research, he had
apparently been able to connect Blackie to a number of other axe murders in the Midwest in the
years before and after those in Velisca. Detective Wilkerson even claimed that he would be able to
definitively prove that Blackie was at almost all of the crime scenes, if given the chance. And so,
in 1916, four years after the murders, Blackie Mansfield was indicted by a grand jury, brought to
Valiska from Kansas City where he lived and investigated. However, an alibi placed Blackie in Illinois
on the night of the murders in Velisca, and he was ultimately cleared and released. Some have
said that his release may have been due to political pressure laid on by Senator Frank Jones himself,
that the alibi was weak and easily forged, and that investigators were basically coerced by Jones
into letting Blackie go. There was also allegedly a witness who was supposed to show up
that would prove that Blackie was in Valiska on the night of the murders, but the witness simply
never appeared. Strange, right? Either way, here is when the story really gets weird. Detective Wilkerson's
seemed to point to the existence of a serial killer, a serial killer who was operating in the Midwest.
Wilkerson, in his investigation, identified a few similar murders that had occurred and linked them through the train lines and dates that they happened on and drew a conclusion.
However, many have come to conclude that Wilkerson was on to something with his serial killer theory,
but that he pointed the finger at the wrong man at the end of the day.
Really quickly, we're going to describe a few of the first of the story.
these other similar crimes that Wilkerson linked to the same killer.
September 17, 1911, 266 days before the Velisca axe murders.
Six people are axed to death in two neighboring houses in Colorado Springs, Colorado,
in a very similar manner. The victims included an infant and almost an entire family.
Once again, just like at Velisca, the murders occurred late on a Sunday night,
and the victim's heads were crushed with the blunt end of an axe.
All the victims had been killed in their sleep, in their beds, and only one victim seemed
to awaken before they were killed.
The other's lives were ended before they even knew what was happening.
Robbery was ruled out as a motive in the crime, as all of the valuables were left untouched
in both houses.
The blinds had been drawn, the house's doors were locked, and just like in the Velisca murders,
one of the victims' family members discovered the bodies after grabbing a spare key.
In addition, there were sheets covering the bodies and clothing placed over the victims
faces. And in another striking similarity, the killer also used an axe that they had found
on the property that night to end their victim's lives. Left the bloody axe at the scene,
and after the murders, used a bowl of water to wash the blood from their hands, which they also
left in the house. It should be noted that these people lived close to the railroad in Colorado
Springs, just like the Moore family did in Veliska, and the perpetrator of this specific massacre
was never con.
September 30th, 1911,
253 days before the Velasca
Acts murders. Monmouth, Illinois.
Once again, a family fails to appear
in the small community for their routine duties.
And some locals are sent to check
on the family's house.
They find that the front door is locked,
but they enter through the back door.
Once again, all of the curtains are drawn
and the windows are covered.
And inside, they find the box.
bodies of three family members, bludgeoned to death and covered in bed sheets.
There is no sign of the killer.
Interestingly, though, their murder weapon is thought to have been a metal pipe,
as there was a pipe found nearby the crime scene covered in blood in human hair.
Once again, this family lived near the railroad.
October 15, 1911, 238 days before the Velisca axe murders.
By now, this is a familiar story.
The Shoman family who lived in the small community of Ellsworth, Kansas, weren't picking up their
phones on a Monday morning.
When friends investigated the house, they found the door unlocked and discovered the two
parents and their three children all butchered in their beds.
Most appeared as though they had not awoken before they were killed.
A bloody axe and a lamp were found inside of the house near the bodies.
All the family members' faces were savagely beaten and chopped up to a pulp, rendering them
unrecognizable. And Mrs. Shoman had been posed allegedly after her death in some sort of a sexual
position. A bloodhound picked up the scent of the murderer and chased the scent to the nearby railroad
tracks. June 5, 1912, four days before the Velisca axe murders. The bodies of Roland Hudson
and his wife Anna Hudson are discovered in their home in Paola, Kansas, a short ride from Veliska, Iowa.
They had been brutally slain with the blunt side of an axe.
The bodies of the couple are discovered in their darkened home,
and their corpses had been covered with a sheet.
An extra material had been placed over their battered faces.
Sound familiar?
Also, a lamp was discovered at the scene as well.
So what do you think, the listener?
Could the Velisca axe murders have been only a small piece of a larger puzzle?
Could one man have been responsible for all of these savage killings that we just listed?
There have been suspects over the years connected to those crimes, but nobody has ever been
formally convicted.
However, when you look at the bigger picture, you examine the time frame of these killings,
the bizarre similarities between the crimes, and the brutality and randomness of them all.
It seems to point to the work of a single man.
But that's just our thoughts.
Nobody was ever formally convicted of the Velisca Axe murders, and to this day there are no real suspects.
Whoever committed those murders simply walked out of the Moor House that day, into the early morning air, and walked away a free man.
These murders are still a mystery that continue to haunt Iowa and all of America to this day.
Oh yeah, and did we mention that the Velisca Axe murder,
house is thought to be one of the most haunted places in America. Let's dig into that for a moment
before we end this podcast. So as you guys know, I'm a paranormal investigator. I've been doing this for years.
It's my full-time career. And in last week's episode, we covered Gitchie Manitoo. If you haven't
watched that video on YouTube yet of Courtney and I out there investigating, we had literally one of the
freakyest nights who could possibly imagine. And that's on my YouTube, the paranormal files. But I just have to
Explain to you guys that in the paranormal world, the Veliska Axe Murder House is one of those crown jewel locations that everybody wants to go to.
It's known to be so active, so dark, so negative that people are literally dying to go there.
A couple of years ago, a group of ghost hunters who were actually there in the Moore residents encountered a negative sort of entity as they described it.
And one of the investigators ended up stabbing themselves with a knife.
He claimed later on that something in the house made him do this.
I actually was just at the Velisca Axe Murder House back in November of 2020.
And I spent the night there.
I actually slept in the house in the Stillinger Girls room.
If you want to watch my actual video documentaries,
you just type in the paranormal files Veliska Axe Murder House on YouTube.
You'll see that.
But in the meantime, I interviewed Johnny Hauser.
He was a guy who has worked at the house for years.
He was on the ghost adventures episode that they filmed there.
He knows the ins and outs of the property.
And real quickly, at the end of this podcast,
I'm going to play you a little snippet of the interview that I conducted with Johnny there on the property.
And I'm going to let him explain some of the ghost stories to you guys.
Hey, guys, Johnny Hauser here at the Valiska Axe Murder House.
We're going to go inside and show you some hot spots and tell you a little bit about what happened.
So come on in.
Right here we have the kitchen.
Not a whole lot happened, of course, in here.
Right against the corner was that morning when they found him the bloody pot of water
where whoever washed his hands, mirrors covered, also had half-eaten food left at the table.
So throughout the night, the main idea is this person was probably already in the attic hiding.
Crept out, killed the parents, got the kids, got the two downstairs, went back, got him again, again, again.
left the axe, made himself a meal, covered mirrors, whatnot.
As far as activity, it seems like this room and the living room, which will go in right now,
are almost kind of safe zones.
Stuff happens, but not to the extent as upstairs.
Upstairs is probably 90% of everything.
Reverend Kelly, the only guy that ever confessed to it and was ever tried,
he was acquitted of all charges because he's just insane,
said that voices told him rise, Peter Slay, and he,
a shadow came out of the backyard, gave him an axe.
said he walked in this door here at 1 a.m. and voices told him Slay Utterly. He said he killed everyone.
Then he said he didn't. Then he said he worked for the Queen of England. I mean, he's just all over the place.
This is Catherine's bedroom, but this is where Ina and Lena still and Drew were staying that night.
So in this room you had the Ina and Lena, and they weren't neighbor kids. They lived like seven miles outside of town.
They were in this room. The raw bacon was on the floor. Mir's covered again. The axe was left right up against the door frame there.
And as far as this room, it's a very amity-bill quality to a kind of a mental manipulation type thing going on.
And this is where the guy stabbed himself two or three years ago.
Said he was just in here provoking, woke up in the emergency room, didn't know what happened.
But evidently, he took a hunting knife that was on his side and just right through the chest.
So I just tell people that story just because if you're in this room and you start getting weird, go outside, get some fresh air.
Don't push the issue in this room for sure.
The crime scene, when the doctor, physician minister came in,
basically you had Ina and Lena in this bed.
The oldest one was on the outside,
and her leg was kind of dangling off the bed
and her arm was up like that.
She had a defensive wound on her arm.
Well, they say a defensive wound.
She had a mark on her arm where they said she went up to block.
So you just had those two here.
Of course, blood is just going to be everywhere.
And again, mirrors covered.
This actually had a door on it with an oval wind.
window cut out into the door. That was covered with a sheet.
These two doors out here, this one and the one in the kitchen had one of Sarah's nightgowns torn half and I was just kind of draped over.
The forensics guys say, oh, well, they'll cover the mirrors because they don't want to see themselves committing the crime indicating they know the people.
Other people talk about souls being trapped in mirrors.
But why would he cover that piece of glass on a door inside the house?
Like, they're going to find the bodies at that point.
Was it him not seeing his reflection in anything?
I think these are little things that could unravel the whole mystery,
but also you can't rationalize crazy.
The guy thought it would be a good idea to kill eight people
and eat a meal and leave raw bacon on the floor.
Like, none of it makes sense.
We'll go up the steps.
This is where River and Kelly thought he's climbing Jacob's ladder to heaven in his confession.
So this is the parents' bed.
The dad was on the outside, the mom on the inside.
mirrors covered throughout the night. This is one of the axe marks left behind on the back of the wall that was wallpapered over.
A lot of people think the killer was hiding in the attic, came out just boat, boat, walked over to the top of the steps there and heard something.
It just froze because there's a big pool of blood there that wasn't connected with this blood over here.
So it's like he hit on took a few steps and just stood there like that, went in, got those kids, the two downstairs got them again, again, again.
But that's just a guess.
And once again, gruesome up here, pretty.
On the 100-year anniversary, a forensics team came in at Luminol.
Throughout the house, right?
On cameras under floorboards and stuff.
I came in.
I mean, it was just everywhere.
And I was skeptical at first.
Like, man, it's been 100 years.
And they're like, well, they would have just wiped it visibly clean.
You know, you can paint it, whatever.
We'll find it.
And I'm like, show me this blood.
So they did it.
And it was all over the place.
And it was interesting for about 10 minutes.
And I was like, I don't want to see that.
And I love horror movies, you know, I'm big into that, but this is six little kids.
This happened.
And I was just like, man.
So in here is what we call the attic.
And most likely the guy was hiding in here waiting.
The cigarette butts were found in this room.
And it just makes sense.
You know, just straight shop for the parents.
And nobody's going to look in here.
And of course, the good old Amityville windows.
And those are original too.
So if you ever go buy or rent a house that has those windows,
Don't do it.
It's run.
This is probably the epicenter of everything that happens up here.
It seems to stem out of this room.
Really?
And just kind of flow into the entire upstairs.
Which if you figure, if the guy was here, it's June.
It's hot.
He's sitting in here for a long time.
Just thinking about what he's going to do.
That negative energy just had to have soaked into every fiber of this wood and everything.
This place had to like an atom bomb on negative energy.
dropped on it that night, which I think is still here at that point.
So this is where Herman Paul, Boyd, and Catherine were all found.
The axe marks in the ceiling up here were just everywhere.
I mean, this whole ceiling was about destroyed with them.
So to come in, look at these little kids while they're sleeping and hit them that many times
with an axe is just, I don't even know what to say, you know.
A lot of the toys and stuff in this room go off.
One of the creepier things I've ever had happened happened up here.
Friday night and the overnight's canceled so I thought well I'll fix some stuff and clean up a little bit
lock the kitchen doors so nobody would walk in and trying to figure out how to fix this thing
pretty soon will somebody walks in the house and it's like come on people we're not open so then I'm like
they have no idea I'm up here so I'm gonna have fun with this so I hide in the closet playing with scare the crap out of this kid and just be like
why are you breaking in if you want to see it I'll just show it to you I'm in the closet walking downstairs
comes upstairs into this room I kick that door open do the big blah nothing I
I couldn't even move, I couldn't even talk.
I was just like,
you know?
And then I went back home,
I checked the whole house,
door was still locked,
watch a surveillance video,
there's nothing.
Wow.
Come back about three days later,
and I'm just trying to rationalize this in my mind.
And I'm looking at the door,
I'm like,
when I kicked that thing,
I kicked it right here,
which then split that all the way up.
So I kicked that door hard enough to break it,
like something happened.
At that point,
I'm like,
leave me alone. I'll leave you alone. We've got to have some boundaries. Like, screw with the
overnights. Oh, you want. Fair game. Wow. But leave me out of this. You've ever heard people
leave in the middle of the night? Oh, for sure, all the time. So, when I first came here,
I was kind of eh about the ghost stuff. Like, I believed in it, but I hadn't seen anything.
I had my first experience, and then I started staying the night, and I've done over 400
overnights alone in the house at this point. And I started looking for patterns and birthdays,
anniversaries, moon phases, storms, the eclipse. Like, is there a word?
I can say nothing.
The Sack and Fox Native Americans were here way before us,
and there's no Veliskas anywhere.
This is like the only veliska on planet Earth.
It's because it's Walliska,
which in the Musquaki language means evil spirit.
So like I taught myself some Musquakey to go that route.
I found no rhyme or reason to any of it.
I'd watch overnights,
oh, we rolled a ball.
The kids rolled it back to us.
We had such a great night.
Next night the people are running out of here at 11 p.m.
Left half their gear, I got to mail it back to them.
I don't think the family's here.
which may be controversial to Axe House Purists,
but I've been here over 15 years, you know.
I think the Axe House is haunting itself.
It's like Rose Red, and it's constantly evolving
and constantly changing and constantly morphing.
I think it just loves new people coming in, scaring them.
So it's hard for people to be in here alone.
Yeah, oh for sure.
Yeah.
Have you seen many people do it?
You will be one of five that's ever done this.
Really?
Myself, another guy I know, there was one lady who stayed two nights by herself.
So, yeah, I can name like five people, including myself that's done a solo overnight.
That's what I'm going to do tonight.
You'll be on the Axe House Hall of Fame.
Yes.
But you definitely think it's going to be kind of spooky being in here.
No doubt.
No doubt about it.
And I'll never do it overnight again.
I've swore up overnights at the X House.
I'll go to her place.
but a lot of times people will leave.
And like if it's summertime, Friday or Saturday night,
and I'm out doing stuff, I'll drive by and they left,
and I'll see like a lantern on up here.
Like, awesome.
Guess who gets to go upstairs and shut the lantern on?
So, yeah, it's, man, good luck tonight.
I don't know what else to say, but good luck.
And I had one group, been here, like, we get a lot of repeat people.
They were here probably 20, 30 times.
And they lasted an hour.
I'm like, do you guys leave?
We're like, yeah, it just felt weird.
They were like nothing happened, but it just felt like something really bad was about to happen.
So we just didn't even want to push it.
The craziest, freakyest story I've ever heard involves me.
So I wanted to recreate what happened that night.
We wanted to push the house to its breaking point to get a definitive answer for who did this.
So I'm with the axe up in the attic, and I have eight friends just randomly come in.
I have no idea when they're coming.
They're kind of hang out for a while.
Okay, we're going to bed.
You know, they get in the beds.
I wait for a while.
And I also want to see, how did this guy do this?
You know?
So I creep out with the axe.
We had cameras, audio, going everywhere.
And I just hit the floor at the parent's bed.
Well, they start screaming.
I'm like, this is weird.
And we're kind of just loopy because it was like 3 a.m.
Went to the kids' room.
Boom, boom on the floors.
Well, the two down and Iena's room thought I was really like,
doing it. One of them starts bawling, which the video is priceless. He bolts out of the house.
And the other guy's like, come on, what are you doing? He goes out of the house. As I'm walking
to the staircase, I start feeling like I'm half drunk. Like, I'm just out of it. I snap out of that
and I'm standing in the living room. And I look up at one of the IR cameras and I like squint.
We don't see infrared. Well, what am I squinting at? And I thought I heard a voice. And I'm like,
guys, I'm done. We can't, this is bad. This is too much. Well, going over the
As I'm walking from the kids room to the staircase, the kids room closet opens and shuts.
The attic doors slams open. This door opens up. It shows me walk down here. I'm just standing
there for I don't know how long and I'm just like doing this and when you see me kind of shake it off.
I go to that door and when I thought I heard a voice, the audio caught it and the voice goes,
do it. Like to actually do it. Which that's some Amityville stuff. I want nothing to do with.
So it's kind of like a pattern of people sometimes.
kind of tapping into that energy.
Not like it's a conscious thing, but it's almost like
in the guy that wounded himself,
you having that experience.
What do you think that is?
So Reverend, I think that's something that was here before
the murders even happened.
Reverend Kelly is talking about a shadow giving him in the axe.
Nobody's talking about shadow figures in 1918.
I can remember in the 80s when they were aliens
and then they're interdimensional time travelers.
Now they're the spookiest of ghosts and who knows, you know?
But also in his confession,
he said he would,
cry and say he'd never hurt anyone, he'd never do anything like that, but then he'd say something
to the effect of he felt like he was being forced out of his own control, like he was out of his
mind. Then he'd go back to saying he'd never do anything, then he would add these little tidbits.
So I think something was here before that even happened. Maybe if you're not mentally strong
or grounded in whatever you believe in for protection, that can latch on to somebody. And that's
what scares me about this place. That's why that's, this place
scares me but I also respect that to where shadow dude I want nothing to do with you because if you
don't have me here doing tours you don't you can't mess with overniders you need me so to leave me out of this
beliska everybody in the true crime world knows that town and for a good reason those murders on that
fateful night in 1912 were brutal they were seemingly random and they were made
unsolved. And it has us both wondering, who could have carried them out? Was it the preacher,
the local politician, a completely random serial killer? We don't know. We'll have to chalk it up
as a complete and utter mystery. Hey, everybody, it's Colin here. And Courtney. Shit, my voice
got a crack there. Thank you guys for listening to another episode of Murder in America. I wrote this one
because I've been to Velisca and the story matters a lot to me.
But Courtney, you wrote the next episode that we're airing.
And who are we doing next?
Jeffrey Dahmer.
So if you guys are serial killer fans,
and next week we have a huge case coming up.
If you want to follow us on Instagram,
follow us at Murder in America.
You can follow me at Colin Brown and Courtney.
Courtshan.
If you also would like to become a patron,
we have bonus episodes on there.
We just did the Minnesota Vampire Murder.
Just look up Murder in America on Patreon.
And a place like Veliska.
Sorry,
a place like Veliska.
I've been there.
I know that it's haunted.
And it's truly a place like this
where Courtney and I can both sit and wonder.
The same old question.
The dead don't talk.
Or do they?
All right.
See on the next thing, everybody.
