San Francisco History Podcast – Sparkletack

San Francisco Timecapsule: 01.05.09


Listen Later

THIS WEEK: San Francisco's notorious "Demon of the Belfry" goes to the gallows.
January 7, 1898:
The execution of Gilded Age San Francisco's most notorious criminal

Sure, Jack the Ripper had set a certain tone for serial killing just a few years earlier, but the crimes of Theodore Durrant were even more shocking. See, Jack's victims had been prostitutes, but San Francisco's "Demon of the Belfry" had murdered a pair of girls who were respectable churchgoers. In his very own church.

On the day before Easter Sunday, 1896, a group of women held a meeting at the Emmanual Baptist Church in the Mission District. As they bustled about the small kitchen preparing tea, one woman reached towards a cupboard, looking for teacups. As the door swung open, she shrieked in horror and fainted. Crammed inside was the butchered and violated body of Miss Minnie Williams.

Minnie had been a devoted church-goer, and the police quickly connected her death with the case of another young woman who'd gone missing two weeks earlier. The vivacious Blanche Lamont had also been a member of the church, so the grounds were searched from bottom to top. The body was found in the dusty, disused bell tower -- two weeks dead, arranged like a medical cadaver, and brutalized in an equally horrifying way.

Suspicion fell upon a young medical student and assistant Sunday School superintendent who had been close to both women -- Theo Durrant. News of the police's interest in Durrant spread through the Mission and then infected all of San Francisco. By the time he was actually picked up, only a massive police presence prevented the angry mob from stringing him up on the spot.

San Francisco's "Crime of the Century"

Bankers, judges, hack drivers and bootblacks gossiped about little else, and people lined up for blocks to view the victims' identical white coffins at a local funeral parlor. The City's many newspapers were absolutely thrilled with the story, of course -- during the next couple of years, well over 400 articles about it would appear in the San Francisco Chronicle alone.

It wasn't just that the two young women were such "upstanding citizens" -- the angle that made it horrifying and captivating to San Francisco was the fact that Theo Durrant was such a nice, normal guy. He was a handsome young man, friendly and open in demeanour, well-liked, of excellent reputation, and (again) the assistant superintendent of a Sunday School. Our modern cliché of the serial killer as the "guy next door who wouldn't hurt a fly" was still a long way off. It seemed absolutely incredible to San Francisco that such a -- well, such a 'gentleman' could be capable of such bestial and savage acts.

read on ...
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

San Francisco History Podcast – SparkletackBy Richard Miller

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

71 ratings


More shows like San Francisco History Podcast – Sparkletack

View all
This American Life by This American Life

This American Life

90,491 Listeners

The Daily by The New York Times

The Daily

111,075 Listeners

Total SF by San Francisco Chronicle

Total SF

285 Listeners

Throughline by NPR

Throughline

16,099 Listeners

1619 by The New York Times

1619

31,762 Listeners

The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway by Vox Media Podcast Network

The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway

5,387 Listeners

Wiser Than Me with Julia Louis-Dreyfus by Lemonada Media

Wiser Than Me with Julia Louis-Dreyfus

10,540 Listeners

The Travel Lemming Podcast by Travel Lemming

The Travel Lemming Podcast

4 Listeners

Good Hang with Amy Poehler by The Ringer

Good Hang with Amy Poehler

8,746 Listeners