This Is The Number One Unsolved Mystery In Iowa And It Will Leave You Baffled
It is easy to forget the horrors the demented mind is capable of. Sometimes, however, there is an act committed with such monstrosity that it forever slips its way into the here and now, even decades after it occurred. Imagine now, if you will, human nature at its most foul and barbaric of states, and the effects wreaked upon others by such savage souls as those who would prey upon their neighbors for sheer indulgence of an abominable will. This particularly brutal case will live on in infamy: The Villisca Axe Murders.
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All the window curtains were closed, and for reasons unknown every mirror in the house was concealed behind blankets and aprons. Since the murders, people have been wary of occupying the residence, and it has been turned into a local attraction, promising those who stay in the house a haunting experience.
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There were a slew of other murders carried out with an axe, before and after the events of June 1912. They shared many details with the Villisca case, and Henry Moore was suspected in as well. The crimes were largely committed along the Southern Pacific Railroad, and although police forces at the time found it unlikely to be the same perpetrator, it remains a possibility.
Also suspected for the crime at Villisca and others like it was William Mansfield. Mansfield's wife, infant child, and his wife's parents were hacked to death with an axe two years after the Villisca murders. Just like the Villisca case, bedclothes were laid over the victims' faces and the windows were covered. A third possibility still is the Reverend George Kelly, who boarded a train from Villisca at 5 a.m. the morning of the murders, and allegedly told fellow passengers there were murders committed back in Villisca before the bodies had yet been found. He would later return to the crime scene impersonating an officer of the law, and then actually confessed to the 8 killings, saying that God had told him to slay the family. The jury was unconvinced by his confession, and Kelly was acquitted.
Why were these people killed? Why did the murderer not have an axe of his own to commit this crime with? Did he commit this crime on a whim? How did only 1 victim show any signs of putting up a struggle? There are so many questions still circling this atrocious event that it’s hard to keep them all straight. What do you think happened on that dreaded night? Share your theories and this article with your friends!
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