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Detroit Free Press, September 19, 1873 |
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Ghost Story #20: A Ghost
Monday, July 27, 2020
Herman Menz's Devil
Statues of slave owners, NAZIs, Confederate officers...pffft!
In 1905 Detroiter Herman Menz erected a gargoyle statue that the residents of the city mistook for Satan himself (Menz played into the fervor) and demanded its fall lest they riot and tear it down.
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Detroit Free Press, November 9, 1905 (enlarge) |
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Detroit Free Press, November 11, 1905 |
Later, a man sued him and the statue was auctioned off to pay the settlement.
It was purchased by the owner of the Electric Park but after suffering losses for nearly two years after his purchase it was returned to Menz who vowed to resurrect it.
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Detroit Free Press, September 24, 1908 (enlarge) |
Sunday, July 26, 2020
Ghosts Explain
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Detroit Free Press, February 23, 1898 (enlarge) |
Medium E. Medford Gilman was an admitted fraud. It took a few years in prison on such charges for him to confess to his charlatanism. His game was so good that before coming to Detroit he had swept up another man's wife in Wisconsin and she, along with several other spooks who had set up in a house of tricks on Lafayette Avenue in Detroit, were arrested along with him. Though most of the participants seem to have been spared jail time as they testified against him. For her part, Mrs. Johns, supposed mistress of Gilman, her mother explained in a letter to the editor that it was a working partnership between the two that Mr. John heartily agreed to. Gilman also denied any wrongdoing in matters of the heart.
Also in the city at the time was a man named Edward Ascher (alias E. Robert Lang) who had performed trumpet séances at the home of Prof. Donovan, another Spiritualist. A farmer from Pittsfield Township named Valmore Nichols who had an affinity for Spiritualism was murdered by Ascher after taking out a several hundred dollar loan from a friend and travelling to Detroit to meet the medium. Ascher was charged and found guilty twice for the killing, having had the first conviction revisited, after an earlier hung jury, only to be sentenced to life in the fourth trial.
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Detroit Free Press, August 19, 1898 (enlarge) |
The Louisville and Detroit connections grow closer with the revelation that John Kuprion, one of Lang's Kentucky victims, testified in the original trial that ended in a hung jury. Lang had used similar tactics on Kuprion that he employed on Valmore Nichols, the murdered Pittsfield Twp. farmer whose body was found in the Detroit River. It had floated to the top of the water and been spotted several times but with only the head semi-sticking above the water it was mistaken for a buoy before a boatman from Belle Isle discovered the grisly truth. While the first trial ended in a hung jury Ascher-Lang was eventually re-tried an additional three times, two ending with convictions which sandwiched another trial that was dismissed (I believe).
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Detroit Free Press, March 26, 1903 (enlarge) |
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Detroit Free Press, January 13, 1898 |
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Detroit Free Press, April 16, 1899 (enlarge) |
FURTHER READING:
Saturday, July 25, 2020
Spiritualistic Christening
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Detroit Free Press, March 28, 1898 |
Her and husband Charles are buried at Woodmere Cemetery.
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Evansville Press, August 5, 1907 (enlarge) |
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St. Louis Post Dispatch, October 10, 1897 (enlarge) |
Mrs. Dr. Stanley's Last Week in Detroit
Friday, July 24, 2020
Ghost
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Detroit Free Press, September 25, 1863 |
GHOST
The spectres of the dead, shadows of the grave.
Terrible awe and solemnity.
Prof. Martin Leo Jean's Ghost of Conway Castle with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Linden and a complete dramatic troupe.
Tickets 50 cents.
Ghost Story #19: A Voice in the Night
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Detroit Free Press, April 15, 1888 |
I've also been rather lax on that matter because life gets in the way and then there's also STUFF. "Never mind that" I tell myself and then it's six months later. Nonetheless, I always return with something and since Nankin isn't doing it for me at present I'm seemingly back on Detroit proper. Mainly because it's the path of least resistance towards researching and since I can barely force myself into the task it'll have to do.
While I've compiled a thing or two relevant to the Detroit Opera House here is an early "haunting". A gruesome death-rattling moan-cry that came from behind the building which puzzled a cop, a bothered bystander, some gamblers and general neighbors to the building at Monroe and Farmer.
Labels:
1888,
Detroit Opera House,
ghost,
ghost stories,
hauntings
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
A Genuine Devil
Ordinary places sometimes cradle strange secrets in the hold. Russell McLauchlin's 1946 book Alfred Street is anything but an innocuous re-telling of the history of Alfred Street, as seen from the vantage point of the author during his boyhood at the turn of the twentieth century. It's musical and redolent of the primitive majesty of yesteryear but it would be stretching to say that it's a thriller in any sense of the word.
Yet, on page 87 starts a seemingly mundane tale of the endless litany of Mrs. Clarks who ran the washing loads for the families of Alfred Street, though of supposedly modest means were the author's parents. Recounting one such woman's tale and the scorn it brought from Mary Doyle, another member of the nanny and household staffs of the area, comes this recollection of a devil child being born in Detroit circa 1900:
"I remember well the sensible scorn which she heaped on one of the Mrs. Clarks who reported that there had been born in her neighborhood (Detroit circa 1900), a day or so before, a genuine devil, complete with horns and tail and cloven hood. This, according to Mrs. Clark, much embarrassed the presumed parents and family connection of the prodigy, and euthanasia was proposed by the more radical."
A genuine devil child complete with horns, tail and cloven hoof! Biblically not Satan in the least as Ezekiel tells us, for he comes "as an angel of light". But as a demon or a reincarnation of the fabled Nain Rouge? Who knows!
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