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Villisca, IA, USA; A downstairs bedroom that was occupied by Lena Stillinger, 12, and her sister Ina, 8, houseguests of the Moore children, at the time of the murder in the Villisca Axe Murder ...
According to contemporary news reports, Wilkerson believed Mansfield was responsible for the axe murders of his wife, infant child, father-in-law, and mother-in-law in Blue Island, Illinois, on July 5, 1914 (two years after the Villisca murders), the axe murders committed in Paola, Kansas, four days before the Villisca murders, and the murders ...
The Josiah B. and Sara Moore House is a house in Villisca, Iowa, United States. The house was the site of the 1912 brutal murder of eight people, including six children. A documentary has been made about the murder, which remains unsolved. The house was renovated in the 1990s and serves as the Villisca Axe Murder House. [2]
Hudson Murders (June 1912, in Paola, Kansas): Roland Hudson and his wife were killed with an axe. Villisca axe murders (June 10–11, 1912 in Villisca, Iowa): the Moore Family (no relation to Henry Lee Moore), as well as two visiting girls named Ina Mae and Lena Stillinger, were brutally killed at the Moores' home.
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The home has been restored to the way it looked in 1912, the night of the unsolved ax murders of eight people. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ...
Billy the Axeman [4] (also referred to as the Ax-Man, [5] the Midwest Axeman, [6] and the Man from the Train [3]) was the name of a suspected serial killer thought to be responsible for a series of family murders that occurred mainly in the U.S. Midwest between September 1911 and June 1912.
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