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True Crime Historian

Bacon On The Table

True Crime Historian

Richard O Jones

True Crime, Documentary, Arts, Society & Culture, Performing Arts

4.4729 Ratings

🗓️ 11 December 2024

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Brutal Murder Of Mayme Sherman

A True Crime Short Story by Richard O Jones

Ad-Free Safe House Edition

One of the factors behind my interest in historical true crime is that my hometown of Hamilton, Ohio, seems to have a particularly rich history of crime--murder in particular, but not just murder. I’ve done several local programs about the safecrackers, bandits, and other notorious characters. This short story, “Bacon On The Table,” concerns the third of three “bluebeard” killers in the first decade of the 20th century. The first was the murder of Hannah Knapp by Alfred Knapp in December, 1902. This is the subject of my book, “The First Celebrity Serial Killer.” But even before this crime came to light, Samuel J. Keelor tried to decapitate his wife on Valentine’s Day, 1903. You can read more about that story in my ebook, “The Sleepwalking Slasher.

The following year, just a week after Knapp paid the ultimate penalty for his crime, Charles Victor Sherman commits the horrible crime detailed in this episode.

In more recent days, Hamilton is the hometown of “the Cross Country Killer” Glen Rogers, who murdered at least five people in 1994 and 1995, and probably more than that. He is currently on death row.And perhaps the most sensational of all Hamilton stories is the Easter Massacre of 1975, in which James Urban Ruppert gunned down his mother, his brother, and his brother’s wife and eight children. But friends, this was not Hamilton’s first mass family murder, but our third. In 1925, Francis Lloyd Russell shot eight members of his family one hot summer night (see the Two-Dollar Terror “Massacre On Prospect Hill”). And in October, 1929, the barber Charlie King opened the gas pipes in his house while his wife and five sons slept, then hopped on a northbound freight train (see the Two-Dollar Terror “The Gas Fume Fugitive”).I am also descended from murderers, although their crimes weren’t in Hamilton but in various Kentucky locations. Maybe I’ll tell you about those someday.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Popular

0:02.0

com

0:03.0

Bacon on the table

0:10.0

The Brutal

0:13.0

The Brutal Murder of Mamie Sherman

0:16.0

A true crime short story

0:19.0

by Richard O. Jones.

0:29.6

Mamie Sherman was not anxious to share the news with her husband.

0:35.6

She had gotten a job offer to be a telegraph operator at the Cincinnati Hamilton and Dayton Railway, the CH&D station in Glendale, a job that paid $25 a month and a chance for advancement.

0:43.3

But she worried, knowing that her husband would not take it well.

0:48.3

She'd only been married to Charles Victor Sherman for just over a year, but she knew that he was a jealous man and did not

0:55.8

want her to work. They'd been going around and around about it lately, and she'd been trying to find a

1:01.7

good way to break the news to him. When the ice man, William Brock, came around about 10 a.m. to make

1:08.8

his daily delivery, Mamie was not at home.

1:12.5

He found her a few doors down, talking to a neighbor, and they walked back to her house together.

1:18.1

She seemed angry about something and remarked,

1:20.8

There will be hell here again tonight.

1:23.7

What do you mean, the Iceman asked, and she told him about the job offer.

1:28.4

He told her,

1:29.5

"'You should just stay at home then. Charlie makes money enough.'

1:33.3

"'I don't care what he thinks,' she said.

1:36.3

Brock noticed that the hatchet the Sherman's normally kept near the icebox was not in its usual spot.

...

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