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Small town Wisconsin PDF

200 Pages·1971·31.373 MB·English
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SMALL TOWN WISCONSIN by Verna King Gruhlke -~- - -- --- - ...... - SMALL TOWN WISCONSIN by Verna King Gruhlke w1sc;ONSIN ttouoo. LT;o. MADISON, WISCONSIN First Edition Library of Congress Card Number 77-165-336 Copyrighted, 1971 by Verna King Gruhlke, All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America for Wisconsin House, Ltd., by Straus Printing and Publishing Co., Inc., Madison, Wisconsin Designed by Dru Maki TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Cannibalism, USA 1 2. Frieridly Village . . 10 3. The Reverend and Mrs. Warren Baxnes 13 4. The Unhappy Days 18 5. Let's Get A way . . 27 6. Several of My Parents' Favorite People 35 7. When Men Ate Angels' Food 47 8. Spanish Flu and Fruitcake 60 9. Village Characters 66 10. Little Girls Are Cuter 75 11. What Did You Do for Excitement? 82 12. Old Gxandma Jew 92 13. The Little Black Book 96 14. The Show's the Thing 104 15. The Chatauqua Is Coming! 112 16. Culture, Limited .. . . .. 117 17. Santa Claus and the Town Drunkard 126 18. County Fair . ......... . ... 133 19. Dad's Irish Relation and the County Fair 143 20. Fresh Breeze from Canada 148 21. For Love's Sake Only 158 22. Wautoma Is Invaded 163 23. Wautoma Adjusts, Reluctantly 169 24. Homeless Near A Thousand Homes 177 - "To Lydia & Margaret with Love" I-Cannibalism, U.S.A. Imagine waking up some morning, turning on a radio or picking up a newspaper, and being confronted with the news that your hometown ai·ea, the scene of your nostalgic daydreams, is in reality the setting for one of the most heinous crimes of the present day. This is exactly what happened to me in November, 1957, when Ed Gein, an apparently harmless little farmer living in Waushara County, was suddenly discovered to be one of the most monstrous criminals of all time. The story began when Mrs. Bernice Worden, who ran the hardware store in Plainfield, Wisconsin, disappeared and her son found bloodstains in the store. Mrs. Worden had been working alone that Saturday morning and not many people recalled having seen her; the town was almost deserted since most of the men in the vicinity were out deer hunting. The last entry in Mrs. Worden's sales book revealed that she had sold several quarts of antifreeze. Her son recalled that Ed Gein had been in the store several days previously saying that he would be in again soon to purchase some. Smely there was no reason to believe that mild-mannered soft-spoken Ed Gein, fifty-one years old, who often hired QUt as a baby-sitter for his neighbors, would have anything to do with the disappearance of a woman as popular and attractive as Mrs. Worden. But acting on a hunch, her son told the sheriff about the antifreeze, and the sheriff drove out to Gein 's farmhouse to look it over. How horrified he must have been to step into the dark summer kitchen and see there in the shadows Mrs. Worden's nude body, hanging by its feet, headless, and disembowelled exactly as if it were the carcass of a deer! But that was not all - fmther investigation revealed ten other human heads in the house, some carefully wrapped in cellophane; a chair upholstered in human skin; and vests made of skin and parts of women's bodies which Gein admitted wrapping about himself as he spent the long evening hours alone in his dreary out-of-the-way farmhouse. Eai·l Riordan, the district attorney, took one look around the kitchen of Gein's house and said: "This is cannibalism." And well he might, for Mrs. Worden's heart was soaking in a pan of water as if being prepared for cooking and her liver was sizzling in a frying pan, already half consumed. Gein was immediately taken to Wautoma, Wisconsin, (my home town and the county seat of Waushara County) where he 1 was locked up in the county jail. Earl Riordan went over to the post office and asked my brother, who is the postmaster at Wautoma, if he would like to come over to the jail and see the most incredible thing that he (Earl) or anyone else had ever heard of. Robe1t, my brother, went to the jail having heard nothing of the story except the disappearance of Mrs. Worden, and was ushered into the presence of Ed Gein. Hours later, after having heard the full confession of this little farmer, he came home to his family thoroughly sickened and horrified. Gein 's confession revealed him to be an incredible murderer. A psychiatrist from Chicago who examined him later said he was "one of the most dramatic human beings ever to confront society." In spite of the weird tale which Gein unfolded in the jail at Wautoma late that Saturday afternoon, the full measure of his evil deeds will probably never be told in detail. Much of what he had to say was too fantastic for human belief and for that reason will not be told; yet later investigations showed he had been telling the truth. Then, too, Mrs. Worden had many relatives whose feelings and right to privacy were respected by not revealing all of Gein's horrendous acts to a shocked but very curious public. Gein admitted killing only two women, but he said the human heads found in his house had been stolen from graves. At fil:st there were spine-chilling doubts that this claim of his could be true, but subsequent investigations again showed he was not lying. The question uppermost in the minds of the residents of Plainfield and Wautoma, and indeed of the entire nation, was: How had Gein come to b~ the fiend that he was, living in filth behind drawn shades and locked doors, reading detective stories and textbooks on anatomy and embalming? The key to the mystery seems to lie with his mother, a strong-minded woman who told her son that all other women were sinful - and he believed her. Her husband and another son died, leaving her and Ed alone in the filthy gloomy farmhouse. She suffered a long illness during which Gein nursed her tenderly. When she died in 1945, he nailed the door of her room shut and it was not opened until the death of Mrs. Worden plunged the entire house into the limelight and showed it for what it really was - a house of horrors. Psychiatrists who have studied Ed Gein say that he has a split personality which causes him to be torn between a feeling of love and hatred for women; he may also be a victim of necrophilia, or love of the dead. One expert declared that this case is unparalleled in history, and scientific study of it may help to detect any other Geins who may be living undetected in our midst. Horrible thought! 2

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.