Episode 373: In the shadowy annals of North American crime, few names evoke as much dread as H.H. Holmes, a master manipulator, a conman, and a predator who thrived in the chaos of a rapidly changing world and the man often called America’s first serial killer. Born Herman Webster Mudgett, Holmes’s reign of terror began in Chicago, where he constructed his infamous “Murder Castle”—a labyrinth of hidden rooms, trapdoors, and secret passageways designed to lure and dispatch his victims during the bustling days of the 1893 World’s Fair. But Holmes’s evil did not respect borders; his murderous path would ultimately stretch into Canada.
During his murderous career, in 1894, Holmes claimed the lives of his accomplice, Benjamin Pitezel, 38, and three of his youngest victims, Benjamin’s children: Howard Pitezel, 8, in Indianapolis, and, later in Toronto, Pitezel’s daughters, Alice Pitezel, 15, and Nellie Pitezel, 11. Their tragic deaths in a quiet Toronto neighbourhood forever linked Holmes’s legacy to both sides of the border.
Sources:
The Holmes-Pitezel case by Frank P Geyer | Internet ArchiveH. H. Holmes: Master of Illusion — Swindler — Crime LibraryHolmes' Autobiogrpahy | Library of CongressHolmes' Own Story by Herman W. Mudgett | Project GutenbergDepraved: Schechter, Harold | Internet ArchiveThe Devil in the White City by Erik Larson | goodreadsH.H. Holmes: The True History of the White City Devil | goodreadsForensic-Scholars-Today-1.2-H.H.-Holmes-One-of-Americas-First-Recorded-Serial-MurderersBenjamin Freelon Pitezel (1856-1893) | WikiTree FREE Family TreeThe Toronto link to America's bloodiest serial killer - Spacing TorontoHOLMES - PITEZEL CASE: A History of the Greatest Crime of the Century and of the Search for the Missing Pitezel Children.H. H. Holmes | by Rebecca FrostA Book of Remarkable Criminals, by H.B. Irving
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