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Jack the Ripper H. H. Holmes Amelia Dyer Mary Ann Cotton Jane Toppan George Chapman Belle Gunness Joseph Vacher Servant Girl Annihilator William Palmer Johann Otto Hoch The Bloody Benders Thomas Neill Cream Thug Behram Delphin LaLaurie Burke and Hare Catherine Wilson Joseph Philipe W. H. Theodore Durrant Thames Torso Murderer Amelia Sach Annie Walters
Jesse Pomeroy Walter Horsford
Frederick Deeming
Catherine Flannagan
Margaret Higgins
Louisa Jane Taylor
Henri Pineux ("Count Henri de Tourville")
Roland P. Molineux Thomas Piper
Anna Zwanziger
Joseph Briggen
Lucretia Cannon
Thomas Carr
George Caraway
Williamina Dean
Martin Dumollard
Gessina Gottfried
Marie Jeanneret
Helene Jegado
Pierre Lacenaire
Sarah Jane Newman
Charles Peace
Pierre Voirbo
Thomas Wainright
Alfred Warder
Margaret Waters
Edmund de la Pommerais
Edward Pritchard
Jean Raies
Stephen Richards
Sarah Jane Robinson
Lydia Sherman John Wesley Hardin
William Bonney ("Billy the Kid") John Bishop
Thomas Williams
Mary Ann Britland
Jane Scott
Sarah Dazley
Jessie King Ada Chard-Williams
William Williams Jean Baptiste Troppman Eugene Chantrelle
Thanks everyone for contributing!
Boston, you say? I live in the area, although I've never heard of him before. Definitely going to have to look into this....
My friend lives quite a bit away, so I'm still waiting for the return of my copy. XD
Thank you for your fascinating input, Jeff. <3 I really appreciate it.
I'm probably going to go through these names over the weekend and organize the list properly- ABC order, timeline, victim #, confirmed, suspected, or unknown.
Totally amazed how many women are on this list.
"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
Maria van der Linden (or Van der Linden or Vanderlinden) murdered by poison 16 to 27 people (sources vary) between 1880 and 1883 in Leiden, Holland. Another 45 - 50 victims survived.
Harry Hayward of Minnesota - who murdered his misress Kitty Ging with two assistants, and in his confession mentioned several other previous killings that had not been solved.
Samuel Dougal, who killed one definite victim in 1899 (and was tried for it in 1903 and convicted). He may have killed two earlier wives in the 1880s.
Dr. Milton Bowers of San Francisco - supposedly (he was acquitted)killed three wives.
Robert Butler, who killed a wife, husband, and child (but was acquitted after a remarkable defense of himself in court) and later killed a man he was trying to rob.
John Owens, who slaughtered a family of a blacksmith in 1870.
Thomas Fury (Great name that!) who killed his family in 1865 or 66 - he wanted to get his figure into the Tussaud Chamber of Horrors.
Emmanuel Bartholemey - made a career of killing policemen and political opponents in France in Britain, fighting the last known duel in England (which he probably fixed against his opponent). He ended beng hanged in 1855 for killing a wealthy merchant (who he was possibly trying to blackmail) and a retired soldier who tried to stop him. Reading about him he comes across as a total villain. He had one defender: Victor Hugo writes a chapter honoring him as a French patriot who "was misunderstood" by the British in the novel Les Miserables. If one really thinks highly of Hugo, reading that idiotic chapter reduces the novelist's stature quite a bit.
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