H. H. Holmes


 

Dr. H. H. Holmes was the alias of Herman Webster Mudgett (1861 - May 7 1896) was a 19th-century serial killer.

Related Topics:
Alias - 1861 - May 7 - 1896 - 19th-century - Serial killer

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He was born in Gilmanton, New Hampshire, son of Levi Horton Mudgett and his wife, formerly Theodate Page Price. His early criminal career was based on fraud and forgery, including a cure for alcoholism, real estate scams, and a machine that made natural gas from water.

Related Topics:
Gilmanton, New Hampshire - Alcoholism

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He managed to secure a Chicago pharmacy and the property attached to it (by defrauding the pharmacist), and built a row of three-story buildings on it. The bottom floor was shops, the top his personal office, and the middle floor a maze of over one hundred windowless rooms. He called it The Castle and opened it as a hotel for the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893. Over a period of three years, Holmes tortured his selected victims in soundproof and escapeproof chambers which were fitted with gas lines that permitted Mudgett to asphyxiate the women at any time. Once dead, their bodies went by chute to the basement, where they were either sold to medical schools or cremated.

Related Topics:
Chicago - Pharmacy - World's Columbian Exposition - 1893

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Holmes was discovered when a fire broke out in the building, revealing the carnage therein to the police and firemen, though he might have been caught eventually anyway, as he had taken out insurance policies on some of his victims before killing them.

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The estimates placed the number of victims as between 20 to 100, including mostly women but some men and children; some estimates go as high as 200. Holmes was put on trial for murder, and confessed to 28 murders (in Chicago, Indianapolis and Toronto) and six attempted murders. He was hanged on May 7, 1896, in Philadelphia.

Related Topics:
Indianapolis - Toronto - May 7 - 1896 - Philadelphia

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On 8 July 1878, he married Clara A. Lovering of Alton, New Hampshire.

Related Topics:
8 July - 1878 - Alton, New Hampshire

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On 28 January 1887, he (bigamously) married Myrta Z. Belknap in Minneapolis, Minnesota; they had a daughter named Lucy. He filed a petition for divorce from his first wife after marrying his second, but it never became final. He married his third wife, Georgiana Yoke, on 9 January 1894.

Related Topics:
28 January - 1887 - Minneapolis, Minnesota - 9 January - 1894

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Although sometimes referred to as America's first serial killer, this is not the case. Several other cases of serial murder predated his, with Thomas Neill Cream and the Austin Axe Murderer being just two examples.

Related Topics:
Thomas Neill Cream - Austin Axe Murderer

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Introduction
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