Wicked Women of Northeast Ohio
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About this ebook
In Wicked Women of Northeast Ohio, author Jane Ann Turzillo recounts the misdeeds of ten dark-hearted women who refused to play by the rules.
They unleashed their most base impulses using axes, guns, poison and more. You'll meet Perry's Velma West, a mere slip of a girl who was unfortunately too near a hammer during an argument. New Philadelphia's Ellen Athey, no lady herself, had a similar problem with an axe. Ardell Quinn, who operated the longest-running brothel in Cleveland, would simply argue that she was a good businesswoman. Grim? Often. Entertaining? Deliciously so.
Jane Ann Turzillo
True-crime author Jane Ann Turzillo has been nominated twice for the Agatha for her books Wicked Women of Ohio (2018) and Unsolved Murders & Disappearances in Northeast Ohio (2016). She is also a National Federation of Press Women award winner for Ohio Train Disasters and others--all from The History Press. She is a graduate of The University of Akron with degrees in criminal justice technology and mass-media communication. A former journalist, she is a member of National Federation of Press Women, Society of Professional Journalists, Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime. Visit her website at www.janeannturzillo.com and read her blog at http://darkheartedwomen.wordpress.com.
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Wicked Women of Northeast Ohio - Jane Ann Turzillo
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Introduction
Historically, the world of crime has been dominated by men, so when a criminal act is attributed to the fairer sex, the story is all the more fascinating. It makes front-page news, and a curious public clamors for a peek into the life of the wicked woman who committed the act.
Meet ten women who secured their places in northeast Ohio’s history by committing some of the most sensational crimes of their day. A few of the women in these pages perpetrated their deeds because they were truly wicked. But at least two of them were driven into their wrongdoings. Questions still go unanswered in a couple of cases. If these women had one characteristic in common, it was that they were desperate.
Philandering lovers pushed Annie George and Sarah Robinson to the brink. In Sarah’s case, we know she plugged her sweetheart with a .38. She admitted it. But Annie denied killing her beau even though she had threatened to fill him full of lead. A jury considered the evidence in the case and acquitted her of the murder.
Rose Tauro was bound by a promise to avenge her husband’s death. She carried out that promise with a gun in one hand and her child in the other. Akron Mary
Outland Woodfield sought excitement and found it with the wrong man. Her love for a small-time hood landed her in the middle of a murder investigation and made her the target of a police search.
Ardell Quinn was a smart businesswoman, the proprietor of the longest-running brothel in Cleveland until Eliot Ness came calling at her door.
Marguerite Carlile was accused but never tried for the murder of her husband, a former sheriff. Police were certain she was guilty, but the evidence was lacking. Still, almost eighty years later, no one has answered for that crime.
Axe murderess Ellen Athey was totally unbalanced, truly mad. Jealousy overruled reason when she hacked her housekeeper to death. Velma West bludgeoned her husband to death and then went out to play cards. It is likely that she lacked a conscience.
Today, Jeanette McAdams and Enola Morehouse would be labeled as serial killers. Both committed particularly heinous murders. While Jeanette poisoned six members of her family, Enola used an opiate to do away with unwanted babies.
I hope you enjoy reading the stories of these women and their crimes as much as I enjoyed researching and writing about them.
Chapter 1
Sarah Robinson
The Dusky Belle of Smokey Hollow, Massillon
Sitting in her jail cell, Sarah Robinson was almost gleeful that she had shot and mortally wounded the man she loved. With no chance to make the $2,000 bail, the cocoa-skinned woman pleaded guilty to shooting with the intent to kill at her arraignment. I oughta give him a second shot,
she told a reporter for the Massillon Independent on Tuesday, April 15, 1902. I oughta plugged him once more. That’d fix it.
Her sweetheart was the darkly handsome Walter McNair, and the six-foot, broad-shouldered, sinewy King of Honky-tonk
was a hit with the ladies. They called him well spoken—clever even—and always well dressed. In turn, he paid way too much attention to other women, as far as Sarah was concerned.
McNair kept a saloon in a story-and-a-half old frame building on the corner of South and Canal Streets, and Sarah helped him. It was in an area near the canal in Massillon called Smokey Hollow. The saloon was frequented by people who worked at the Massillon steel plant, many of whom had followed McNair from Cincinnati. By all accounts, it was a wretched place. Paint was peeling from the walls and plaster was crumbling off the ceiling. Grime covered the floor. A large store box served as a table, and smaller boxes were used as chairs. Near the saloon stood an old stone house, known as the king’s castle,
where Sarah lived with McNair on the first floor. The upstairs was rented to a white woman named Mrs. James and her two daughters.
The Ohio & Erie Canal along Canal Street in Massillon, circa 1900. Courtesy Rudy Turkal.
Sarah was consumed with jealousy of McNair’s attention to the white women upstairs when she entered the saloon from the back door on that Monday afternoon. She went behind the bar, and as McNair was drawing a beer, she picked up his revolver and hurried to the front door. Before exiting, she turned to face him. She drew the gun from under her apron, aimed and pulled the trigger, sending a piece of .38-caliber lead into his chest.
She dropped the gun and bolted out the door and down the alleyway to another neighborhood saloon. She begged the owner, Nicholas Schneider, to conceal her. He could see she was agitated, and he asked why she wanted to hide. Was she in some kind of trouble again? At that point she attempted to pull herself together.
No,
she said, there’s no trouble exactly. I’ve shot my sweetheart; that’s all. Did I say I wanted to be hid? I musta been crazy, I don’t want to hide. Send for a policeman. I want to go to jail.
Schneider lost no time in sending for the police. Three police officers, Ernest Wittmann, Turinne Getz and Officer Brownsberger, got word from different sources and converged at Schneider’s saloon. As they took Sarah away, she laughed and joked with them, saying she had never felt so joyful. Walt will never appear against me.
The next day’s edition of the Massillon Independent called twenty-one-year-old, deep maroon–eyed Sarah the Dusky Belle of Smokey Hollow
; her thirty-four-year-old lover was dubbed a Black Adonis.
The story occupied a space on the front page of the newspaper for several days.
It seems as though Walter had his hands full with his many love interests. In addition to his affair with Sarah, he had a wife and child in southern Ohio, though the 1900 census showed he was divorced and living with a housekeeper, Anna Williams. Miss Williams, who was originally from Georgetown, Kentucky, had apparently been elevated to fiancée in his affections.
I knew that Walt was writing letters to a woman named Williams right along,
Sarah said Tuesday evening. And that he didn’t care for me anymore, and then all I wanted to do was to get away, but he wouldn’t let me go.
Weeks before the shooting, Sarah had been accused of stealing eighty dollars from a man named Robert Hammond of Massillon. Part of that money was recovered. Sarah complained that McNair would not give her any money. She would have left him if he had given her enough money to get back home to Addyston.
Sarah had put up with quite a lot. A friend recalled that McNair was always popular with the women in the circles in which he moved in whatever city he lived and that he never seemed to be happy unless he was involved in some type of entanglement of a sensational character.
McNair made his fatal mistake when he began outwardly flirting with the white women who lived upstairs. Rumor had it that he had been intimate with one of them. He even went so far as to tell the light-skinned Sarah, I’m going to get me a white girl; you’re too dark for me.
A short time later, he was seen coming from the white woman’s apartment.
Sarah brooded for days until jealousy clouded rationality. He’s done enough to me in the last six months to go to penitentiary a dozen times. When we was down in Addyston, Walt and me was all right. We lived there four years,
she said.
I met Walt the first time five years ago away down in Tennessee,
she told authorities. Sarah abandoned her husband to run off with McNair but kept her married name. The husband may have been well rid of her, as he made no attempt to come after her.
McNair conducted a saloon in Addyston, a town a few miles west of Cincinnati close to the Ohio River. Sarah ran the saloon while McNair, a brick maker by trade, worked in a steel plant. They moved to Massillon just six months before the shooting.
I used to think that Walter always thought most of Sarah,
said Monroe Hooper, a close friend of McNair. Down in Addyston, when we was all down there, there wasn’t nobody that could take the place of Sarah. And she was good to him.
Hooper recalled how Sarah got up at three o’clock in the morning and, without any help, fixed breakfast for from five to eight of NcNair’s friends so they could get to the steel plant on time. She would keep on working all day, often until late at night, tending bar, cleaning and doing anything else to keep the saloon running. I’d know of lots of cases she’d stay up all night, looking after Walter’s business, and keep right on going the next day, working hard,
Hooper said.
At just five feet, five inches and about 140 pounds, Sarah was described as comely, bordering on the octoroon. She had a tattoo of a heart with rays, five-pointed stars and a spread eagle on a shield on her right forearm.
I never know’d her to get jealous till this talk came out about Walt having a white girl,
Hooper said. That’s what made most of the trouble, I think.
Sarah told Mayor J.J. Wise and her jailers conflicting stories about the shooting. In one account of what led up to the shooting, she said that since they had come to Massillon, a year earlier, they had been having trouble. She claimed McNair did not treat her right.
They had a fight the Thursday night before the shooting. She had been uptown, and when she got back McNair kicked
her around and then locked her up in a room.
All the time since then we’ve been having it,
she said. The way Sarah saw it, McNair had been paying too much attention to other women,